[General Education Index]
UCA General Education Program
AREA OBJECTIVES: Upon completion of the General Education program, students will have an introductory
comprehension of certain fundamental areas of human understanding and
intellectual inquiry; they will have been encouraged to develop a sense of how humanity's diverse pursuits relate to one another.
The general education program has ten areas with the following purposes and
student objectives/outcomes:
Writing
The first-year Writing requirement exists so that students can most directly
and deeply learn how to explore ideas through writing--everything from
discovering topics, to generating material, to making decisive and forceful
arguments. The Writing requirement
is based on two fundamental assumptions: 1) Writing is a form of inquiry and 2)
writing is rewriting. The first of
these assumptions entails encouraging students to take risks in their writing,
to see it as a means of adding to their knowledge and their wisdom. The second
assumption is based on the conviction that writing is an iterative process
involving prewriting, drafting, revising and editing.
Objectives for students completing the Writing requirements are:
- to
use strategies for invention and arrangement;
- to incorporate the elements of good writing (vividness, development,
organization, voice) into their own work;
- to use writing to ask questions--that is, understand that writing is
exploratory;
- to use various forms (e.g., narrative, description, dialogue) to help
articulate their inquiries and develop the implications of their thoughts;
- to respond critically to their classmates' works-in-progress;
- to
use writing to make decisive and forceful arguments;
- to conduct and incorporate library and Internet research into their
writing as a means of engaging in academic conversations;
- to use academic documentation with clarity and consistency.
Fine
Arts
The fine (visual and performing) arts
create and interpret works of the imagination by exploring the way humans use
images, sound, movement, forms, staging, language, or non-linguistic means to
communicate meaning or to produce aesthetic responses. The goal of the fine arts
is to express aesthetic or cognitive insights about the human condition.
Objectives for students completing the
Fine Arts requirement are:
-
to
be familiar with some of the classic works of art;
-
to better understand the nature and
function of different artistic forms;
-
to better understand artists'
creative processes;
-
to understand what distinguishes the
form, content, and style of a work of art;
-
to be familiar with basic aesthetic
concepts and principles;
-
to
be familiar with the basic criteria used to interpret and judge a work of
art.
Health
Studies
The Health Studies component of the
general education program emphasizes the social, spiritual, physical, emotional,
environmental, and intellectual components of health. Courses in the health
studies provide students with the knowledge, behaviors, values, and skills
necessary to be effective health consumers and to take a more active and
enlightened role in controlling their overall health and fitness. The health
studies area recognizes that students need to meet current national and local
health objectives, emphasizing health promotion, health protection, and
preventive services. Health Studies is a broad concept and requires an
interdisciplinary approach to achieve its full potential.
Objectives for students completing the
Health Studies requirement are:
-
to be able to identify the priority
health risk behaviors of college students including: unintentional and
intentional injuries, tobacco use, alcohol and other drug use, sexual
behaviors, unhealthy dietary practices, and physical inactivity;
-
to exhibit characteristics of a
healthy lifestyle by developing skills to decrease morbidity and mortality
from these priority health risk behaviors;
- to
be able to assess current lifestyle behaviors and understand the impact of
these behaviors on the quality and longevity of life;
- to
implement strategies to engage in and maintain a healthy lifestyle
including: initiation of behaviors consistent with a healthy lifestyle,
adaptation of these behaviors to changes occurring throughout life,
demonstration of the skills necessary to engage in a lifetime of physical
activity, and utilization of available health programs;
- to
recognize influences of different cultural traditions, values, and beliefs
inherent in health.
American
History and Government
The American History and Government
requirement seeks to introduce students to the development of American society
and thought. It does so through the study of the American people's historical
experience and the study of the development of American political institutions
and processes.
Objectives for students completing the American History and Government
requirement are:
- to better
understand significant political, social, economic, and cultural
developments in the history of the United States;
- to better
understand the constitution, government, and political processes of the
United States;
- to
be familiar with enduring expressions of American thought by studying one or
more major American documents;
- to
be familiar with the diversity of peoples and cultural traditions that have
contributed to the American experience;
- to
be familiar with the way Americans have adapted Western and non-Western
traditions to develop their own distinctive cultural and political system.
Humanities
The general education Humanities requirement seeks to enable students to
interpret, evaluate, and appreciate works of human culture that can contribute
to a better understanding of the human condition. It does so primarily by
exploring the ways humans express meaning and values and by examining enduring
questions about the nature of the human condition.
Objectives for students completing the Humanities requirement are:
- to be
familiar with some of the classic works of human culture;
- to
better understand and appreciate the nature of human expression and its
roles in human culture;
- to
understand that a work of human culture exists within social, historical,
and linguistic settings that affect its meaning;
- to
understand that meaning is always mediated by interpretation and that a work
of human culture may have multiple interpretations;
- to
be able to employ the skills of critical thinking, reading, writing,
speaking, and listening to interpret a work of human culture.
Mathematics
Mathematics
provides an approach to problem solving through logic and reasoning.
It is used to identify, analyze, generalize, and communicate quantitative
relationships.
Objectives for
students completing the Mathematics requirement are:
-
to
know
the fundamental notation and rules of a mathematical system;
-
to
be
able to recognize problems to which mathematics can be applied;
-
to
be
able to translate problems into mathematical form;
-
to
be
able to construct and interpret visual representations of mathematical
relationships;
-
to
construct
logical and valid mathematical arguments;
-
to
determine
mathematical relationships and solutions to problems;
-
to
clearly
communicate mathematical relationships and solutions.
Oral Communication
The Oral Communication requirement helps students become effective
communicators in a variety of settings. Students learn theories of effective
communication and have ample opportunity to practice and improve their
communication skills. Specifically,
oral communication improves students' conversational, presentational and
problem-solving skills. The study of oral communication improves students'
ability to evaluate messages and employ critical thinking.
Objectives for students completing the Oral Communications requirement are:
- to
be
able to communicate effectively in a variety of situations;
- to
be
able to listen effectively in a variety of situations;
- to
be
able to understand the influence of perception on communication;
- to
be
able to understand the nature and the use of language as a communication
tool;
- to
be
able to think critically and evaluate a variety of messages.
Natural Sciences
The goal of the natural sciences is to better
understand nature. The natural sciences
systematically study natural phenomena. They do so by observing nature, by
collecting and analyzing data, by forming, testing, and revising hypotheses, and
by developing theories.
Objectives for students completing the Natural Sciences requirements are:
- to understand what the realm of science is, and why science
is important to their lives;
- to understand current principles and theories used to
explain natural phenomena and to understand the role of theories in science;
- to do science as a process by conducting
systematic observation, formulating and testing hypotheses,
collecting and evaluating data, recognizing sources of error and uncertainty
in experimental methods, and disseminating results;
- to have developed an understanding of how human activity
affects the natural environment;
- to be able to make informed judgments about science-related
topics and policies.
Behavioral and Social Sciences
The behavioral and social sciences are
characterized by their application of both rational and empirical methods to the
ways in which individuals, organizations, and societies are influenced by the
environment as well as by personal and societal goals.
Objectives for students completing the Behavioral and Social Sciences
requirement are:
-
to
be able to use a variety of theories to
explain human behavior;
-
to
be able to describe how the study of human behavior is founded on
empirical/scientific observation;
-
to
be able to recognize the effects of
the environment on individual behavior or recognize the effects of social
institutions and processes on human interaction.
World Cultural Traditions
The World Cultural Traditions
requirement introduces students to broadly significant elements of the cultural
traditions of the world in their richness, diversity, and complexity. Each
course used to fulfill this requirement entails comparison between several
Western and non-Western cultures.
Objectives for students completing the World Cultural Traditions requirement
are:
- to
better understand significant social, economic, and political
developments in Western and non-Western history;
- to better understand significant cultural developments in Western and non-Western
civilization (religion, art, philosophy, language, and literature);
- to be familiar with enduring expressions of human thought by study of some
major texts of Western and non-Western cultures;
- better
understand the interaction of Western and non-Western cultural
traditions.
For the SKILL AREAS see Objectives
for the Skills of the General Education Program. For the
ATTITUDES/VALUES AREAS see Attitudes and Values of the
General Education Program.
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