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GE Program Goals
C1: Educational Objectives and Criteria
- Introduction
Lower-division
foundation courses in Area C provide a basic understanding
of the traditions, values, and achievements found in literature,
philosophy, and the fine and performing arts. Courses in this
area foster, encourage, and improve students' ability to understand
and respond--cognitively and affectively--to cultural achievements
in both verbal and non-verbal forms.
Foundation
courses in the arts and humanities prepare students to see
achievements within their broad historical and cultural context.
These courses seek to improve and encourage students' ability
to read with critical judgment and write with clarity, emphasizing
writing as an integral part of the process of learning and
discovery. They also cultivate an awareness of language and
the arts as forms of expression valuable both in themselves
and for developing critical awareness. By placing basic knowledge
in a larger context, these courses provide a vision of why
this area is an important component of general education.
Lower-division
courses in C1 - C3 must fulfill EACH of the following objectives:
After completing the foundation courses in Area C, students
should have an enhanced ability to:
| C1
- C3: Lower-Division Educational Objectives |
| EO
1 understand the possibilities and limitations
of language as a symbolic and expressive medium; differentiate
between formal and metaphorical language; |
| EO
2 read with insight, engagement, detachment,
and discrimination; sustain an extended line of reasoning
through both narrative and thematic development; |
| EO
3 recognize crucial historical developments
within the arts and humanities; appreciate the significance
of major literary, philosophic, and artistic works; |
| EO
4 understand the historical development
of issues in the humanities in significant periods
prior to and including the twentieth century; understand
the ways that historical context can illuminate current
problems and concerns; |
| EO
5 grasp relevant aspects of the relationship
of the arts and humanities to science and technology; |
| EO
appreciate non-verbal forms of understanding
and expression; appreciate the aesthetic and historical
development of one or more of the visual or performing
arts; understand the relationship between form and
content; |
| EO
7 understand currently accepted critical
standards; understand the advantages and limitations
of various schools of reasoning; |
| EO
8 appreciate the relative cultural significance
of canonical and non-canonical works of literature,
philosophy, and the arts. |
Lower-division
courses in C1 must meet EACH
of the following criteria:
The expanded course proposal and course outline must clearly
indicate how the course:
| C1:
Lower-Division Criteria |
| CR
1 provides broad historical perspective
on several significant literary periods (usually covering
two or more centuries); |
| CR
2 encourages a comprehensive understanding
of literary achievements and their relationship to
other literary achievements and to the social, cultural,
and historical context in which they were written; |
| CR
3 considers works from more than one genre
and provides perspective on literary classification
and conventions; |
| CR
4 develops the skills of reading with insight,
engagement, discrimination, and detachment; |
| CR
5 develops the skills to analyze and evaluate
a variety of literary approaches; |
| CR
6 focuses on significant accomplishments
by diverse writers from various world cultures; |
| CR
7 serves as a writing-intensive
course in GE; |
| CR
8 completion of Area A. |
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| Criteria
for Courses in a Language other than English |
| CR
1 cultivates language skills that are advanced
rather than basic; |
| CR
2 emphasizes critical thinking and cultural
understanding of a language other than English; |
| CR
3 includes a significant amount of culture
specific to the language being studied; |
| CR
4 emphasizes an in-depth understanding of
language, to include the difference between formal
and metaphorical uses of the language being studied; |
| CR
5 emphasizes a significant amount of literature
in the language being studied, and focuses on these
literary readings as the primary source of the in-depth,
metaphorical understanding of the language being studied. |
Writing
Intensive courses are located in Areas A1, A3, C1, C2, C4,
and D5. These courses include a minimum of 3000
words of writing and base 50% or more of a student's grade
on written work. Faculty teaching Writing Intensive
courses will provide feedback to students about their writing
to help them grasp the effectiveness of their writing in various
disciplinary contexts. A significant selection of writing-intensive
upper-division courses will be made available.
The GE
Program is committed to providing the resources to support
both the required writing component and Writing Intensive
coursework. The kind and amount of writing will be a factor
in determining class sizes, and a Writing IN Generally
Every Discipline (WINGED) program will provide support and
training for faculty.
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