General Education Criteria/
Outcomes - Approved 5/1/08
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1) achieving a grade of C-or better in one of the
following courses which address different aspects of mathematical literacy:
Math 107, 109, 111, 112, 117, 121, 130, or a mathematics course of 3 or more
credits for which one of these is a prerequisite. 2) achieving a score of 50 or better on the CLEP College
Algebra Test, the CLEP College Precalculus Test, or
the CLEP College Mathematics Test. Students must complete the mathematical literacy requirement
by the time they have earned 30 credits; if not, they must register for a
mathematical sciences course every semester until they have completed the
requirement. Because many other courses at the university assume some
mathematical literacy, it is strongly recommended that all students complete
their mathematical literacy requirement as soon as possible. |
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Criteria |
Learning Goals: |
Group III
Students are encouraged to complete their modern and classical language or
symbolic systems courses early, so that they can apply those skills to upper
division coursework.
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Group III Modern and Classical
Languages |
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Criteria: Courses must encompass the comprehensive study of
a natural language, excluding written, spoken contemporary English, with the aim of achieving at least a basic
functional competency in that language. The course should follow a
rigorous and pedagogically sound methodology and practice. Language courses
proposed outside of current MCLL offerings must be approved by the MCLL
Department. |
Learning Goals: Upon completion of the Modern and Classical
Languages sequence the student will have a basic functional knowledge of a
second natural language sufficient to: 1.
read and write if the language
is classical, such as Latin; 2.
speak and aurally comprehend,
if the language does not have a written tradition, such as Salish; 3.
perform all four skills (speaking, aural comprehension, reading, and writing)
if the language is modern and has a written tradition, such as Japanese or
French. 4.
demonstrate both
receptive (visual comprehension) and expressive (manual production)
proficiency if the language is American Sign Language. |
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Group III Symbolic Systems These
systems facilitate communication in specialized ways but do not comprise a
spoken or written language by which members of a culture typically
communicate with each other. |
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Criteria 1. rigorously present a
mapping between a real-world system and a human abstraction of the system. 2. applies analysis,
reasoning and creative thinking in the understanding and manipulation of
symbolic codes. 3.
utilizes
alternative methods of communication, perception, and expression in order to
encourage rigorous thinking. |
Learning
Goals 1. demonstrate
an understanding of the symbols and the transformations of the system
2. relay and
interpret information in terms of the given symbolic system.
3. apply
creative thinking using the symbolic system in order to solve problems and
communicate ideas; |
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Group IV Expressive Arts |
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Criteria
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Learning
Goals Upon
completion of this perspective students will be able to: 1.
express themselves in the making of an original work or
creative performance;
2.
understand the genres and/or forms that have shaped the
medium; and
3.
critique the
quality of their own work and that of others.
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Group V Literary and Artistic
Studies |
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Criteria Courses
cover a number of works in one or more of the various forms of artistic
representation; they also establish a framework and context for analysis of
the structure and significance of these works. In addition, these courses provide
mechanisms for students 1) to receive instruction on the methods of analysis
and criticism, 2) to develop arguments about the works from differing
critical perspectives. |
Learning
goals 1.
analyze works of art with respect to structure and
significance within literary and artistic traditions, including emergent movements
and forms; and 2.
develop coherent
arguments that critique these works from a variety of approaches, such as
historical, aesthetic, cultural, psychological, political, and philosophical. |
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Group VI: Historical and Cultural
Studies |
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Criteria The course justification should
explain the approach and focus with respect to its chronological,
geographical, and/or topical content. A methodological component (e.g.
historiography or ethnography) must be apparent. |
Learning Goals 1.
synthesize
ideas and information with a view to understanding the causes and
consequences of historical developments and events; 2.
evaluate texts or
artifacts within their historical and/or cultural contexts; 3.
analyze human
behavior, ideas, and institutions within their respective historical and/or
cultural contexts.
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Group
VII Social Science |
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Criteria Courses: 1.
systematically study individuals, groups, or social
institutions; 2.
analyze individuals, groups, or social problems and
structures; and/or 3. give
considerable attention to ways in which conclusions and generalizations
are developed and justified as well as the methods of data collection and
analysis. |
1.
Learning Goals 2.
use theory in explaining these individual, group, or
social phenomena; and/or 3. understand,
assess, and evaluate how conclusions and generalizations are justified based
on data |
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Group VIII Ethics and Human Values
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Criteria 1.
Courses focus on one or more of the specific traditions of
ethical thought (either Western or non-Western), on basic ethical topics such
as justice or the good life as seen through the lens of one or more
traditions of ethical thought, or on a professional practice within a
particular tradition of ethical thought. 2.
Courses provide a rigorous analysis of the basic concepts
and forms of reasoning which define the traditions, the ethical topics, or
the professional practices that are being studied. |
Learning
goals 1.
correctly apply the basic concepts and forms of reasoning
from the tradition or professional practice they studied to ethical issues
that arise within those traditions or practices; 2.
analyze and
critically evaluate the basic concepts and forms of reasoning from the
tradition or professional practice they studied.
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Group IX: American and European
Perspectives |
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Criteria Courses
focus on either area and can be comparative in content or approach. The courses are broad in theme, geography,
or chronology. They are foundational and prepare students for further study
by raising core questions of an academic discipline. |
Learning
Goals 1. Demonstrate informed and reasoned understanding of
American and/or European historical and contemporary behavior, ideas,
institutions, and culture; and
2. Analyze
and evaluate what is distinctive and significant about the American and/or
European experience and legacy. |
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Group X Indigenous and Global
Perspectives |
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Criteria Indigenous
and/or global courses will familiarize students with the values, histories,
and institutions of two or more societies through the uses of comparative
approaches. Indigenous
perspective courses address the longstanding tenure of a particular people in
a particular geographical region, their histories, cultures, and ways of
living as well as their interaction with other groups, indigenous and
non-indigenous. Global
perspective courses adopt a broad focus with respect to time, place, and
subject matter and one that is transnational and/or multi-cultural/ethnic in
nature. Whether the cultures or
societies under study are primarily historical or contemporary, courses
investigate significant linkages or interactions that range across time and
space. |
Learning
Goals 1. place
human behavior and cultural ideas into a wider (global/indigenous) framework,
and enhance their understanding of the complex interdependence of nations and
societies and their physical environments;
2. demonstrate
an awareness of the diverse ways humans structure their social, political,
and cultural lives; and
3. analyze and
compare the rights and responsibilities of citizenship in the 21st
century including those of their own societies and cultures. |
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Group XI Natural Science |
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Criteria 1.
Courses explore
a discipline in the natural sciences and demonstrate how the scientific
method is used within the discipline to draw scientific conclusions.
2.
Courses address
the concept of analytic uncertainty and the rigorous process required to take
an idea to a hypothesis and then to a validated scientific theory. 3.
Lab courses
engage students in inquiry-based learning activities where they formulate a
hypothesis, design an experiment to test the hypothesis, and collect,
interpret, and present the data to support their conclusions.
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Learning
Goals 1.
understand the
general principles associated with the discipline(s) studied; 2.
understand the
methodology and activities scientists use to gather, validate and interpret
data related to natural processes; 3.
detect
patterns, draw conclusions, develop conjectures and hypotheses, and test them
by appropriate means and experiments; 4.
understand how
scientific laws and theories are verified by quantitative measurement,
scientific observation, and logical/critical reasoning; and 5.
understand the means by which analytic uncertainty is quantified
and expressed in the natural sciences. |