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From: |
Manuel A. Esteban, President |
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Subject: |
Executive Memorandum 99-05, General Education
Program |
Upon recommendation of the Academic Senate and the concurrence of the Provost, I am pleased to approve the following revised General Education Policy, effective fall 1999. This document supersedes EM 92-18.
General Education Program
The General Education program at California State University, Chico provides a curriculum which is driven by and reflects the core values of the University, as outlined by the Vision and Mission statement. General Education initiates students into a lifetime of learning, thinking, and acting as healthy, informed, ethically mature, and productive people in a diverse and technologically complex world. They will be citizens who can sustain and nurture our historic democratic ideals.
Program Goals
The General Education (GE) Program has five goals:
Teaching Goals
To these ends, all courses accepted as components of the General Education program, therefore, must meet the following foundation characteristics:
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- student-faculty contact |
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- cooperative work among students |
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- prompt feedback, |
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- active practice, |
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- time on task, |
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- high expectations, |
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- respect for diversity among students and faculty. |
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- connect with the residential campus community; |
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- use innovative technologies and learning environments; |
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- connect and apply learning to discipline perspectives and methods of inquiry; |
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- demonstrate scholarship currency and rigor; |
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- prepare students for life and work in a world of diverse ideas; |
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- apply learning to public service; and |
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- assess just how GE program, teaching, Area, and Sub-Area goals are met. |
Organization
The General Education program is organized into three general areas: Core, Breadth, and Capstone. The fundamental skills -- writing, thinking, speaking, mathematics -- are the focus of the Core Requirements of General Education. The study of the natural, behavioral, and social sciences, literature, art, and humanities are contained in the Breadth Requirements, while the integration of those disciplines into a broader understanding of the world is emphasized in the Capstone Requirements. In every course, relevant skills of the Core must be applied as essential to the process of mastering content and making applications.
Outcomes
Graduates of CSU, Chico should be satisfied that General Education has given them a strong, broad, and effective foundational academic experience. In addition, they will
The General Education Program
Students shall complete 48 units in General Education, including
N.B. As a general rule, no department should offer any more than two courses in the Breadth Areas of GE. By exception, more than two courses from a single department may be accepted into Breadth GE, provided that the additional courses satisfy any of the following criteria:
- interdisciplinary courses,- courses devised to meet specific programmatic needs, and
- courses included in Breadth Clusters.
In the application of this rule, distinct academic disciplines within a single multidisciplinary departmental unit will be treated as separate departments. Departments that house faculty representing distinct disciplines by virtue of training, background, or areas of teaching and/or research competence will qualify as multidisciplinary. Multidisciplinary status can be demonstrated by the named fields on the terminal degrees that faculty have that qualify them for their respective teaching assignments, by the presence of distinct program listings and program headers for courses in the University Catalog, or by other relevant evidence.
Breadth Clusters
Coherence of the curriculum resides in the pattern of courses which a student takes; it does not result from a core curriculum which requires that all students take the same set of courses. This recognizes that students have different needs and interests.
Students should be provided with advising patterns which allow them to choose sets of related courses which meet the General Education requirements from among the various Breadth Areas and Sub-Areas. Departments may recommend clusters that would extend students' abilities to view their majors in a broader intellectual perspective, expand career opportunities, or achieve coherence, breadth, and depth in an area outside their chosen field.
Students can come to invest intellectually and personally in their GE experience by choosing courses to fit their interests and needs. The strength of the GE program rests upon the significantly varied set of choices that allow students to formulate a General Education program that is best for them individually. Breadth Clusters will provide useful advising tools that Academic Advisers can employ to help students make well-informed choices. To work effectively to this purpose, Breadth Clusters need to be voluntary and flexible. Clusters will also work best by connecting GE Breadth courses in disparate disciplines with interconnecting but not redundant content.
Breadth Clusters will emanate from the faculty. The General Education Advisory Committee (GEAC) will be responsible for the organization and clarification of suggestions provided by faculty or departments. Efforts will be made to create Clusters wherever faculty so desire and where viable connections exist among courses in different Sub-Areas.
The breadth requirement of the General Education Program suggests that a core of knowledge should characterize the baccalaureate graduate. This basic knowledge should be offered from a variety of disciplinary perspectives to encourage intellectual diversity, but no student of this university can be considered broadly educated without a general understanding of the historical development of world civilizations and their relations to each other. Therefore, GEAC will encourage the creation of Breadth Clusters that address the major themes, issues, and controversies of Western Civilization and its interactions with other world civilizations.
Core Courses (Area A -- Skills)
The principal charge to this area of General Education is to provide students opportunities to learn and demonstrate
It is strongly recommended that students complete their Core Courses as early as possible in their undergraduate careers.
Oral Communication (Sub-Area A1)
Students enrolled in courses meeting the oral communication requirement must
Written Communication (Sub-Area A2)
(Section revised 5-18-05)
Students enrolled in courses meeting the written communication requirement must demonstrate the ability to
Critical Thinking (Sub-Area A3)
Students enrolled in courses meeting the critical thinking requirement must demonstrate
Mathematics (Sub-Area A4)
Students enrolled in courses meeting the mathematics requirement must demonstrate
Breadth Courses (Area B -- Science)
The principal charge to this area of General Education is to provide students opportunities to inquire into the physical universe and its life forms. Students will demonstrate understanding and appreciation of the methodologies of the natural sciences as investigative tools and the limitations of scientific inquiry.
The Physical Universe (Sub-Area B1)
Life Forms (Sub-Area B2)
Breadth Courses (Area C -- Humanities and Fine Arts)
The principal charge of this area of General Education is to provide students opportunities to develop understanding of human creativity, arts, values, and reasoning. Class, race, ethnic, and gender issues should be integrated into courses in this area whenever possible.
In each course, students must
The Arts (Sub-Area C1)
Students must demonstrate
Languages and Literatures (Sub-Area C2)
Students must demonstrate
Philosophy, Religion, and Humanities Studies (Sub-Area C3)
Students must demonstrate
Breadth Courses (Area D -- Behavioral and Social Sciences)
The principal charge to this area of General Education is to provide students opportunities to develop understanding of human behavior and the use of social theory, concepts, and analysis in application to human interaction. Class, race, ethnic, and gender issues should be integrated into courses in this area whenever possible.
All courses must, in a significant way, deal with human behavior. In each course, students must demonstrate learning
Individual and Society (Sub-Area D1)
Students must demonstrate learning in the nature and behavior of individuals and their effects on and adaptations to other individuals, groups, institutions, and their environments.
Political and Economic Institutions (Sub-Area D2)
Students must demonstrate learning in
Cultural and Social Institutions (Sub-Area D3)
Students must demonstrate learning in
Breadth Courses (Area E -- Lifelong Learning)
The principal charge to this area of General Education is to encourage student understanding of, and stimulate curiosity about, the self as an integrated and complex being. Students must
Upper Division Themes
The principal charge to this area of General Education is to provide students with learning opportunities which require them to integrate a variety of skills and content areas from three separate courses that are integrated with each other and integrative with a unifying thematic conception.
Themes will identify clearly a set of basic enduring questions which humans have asked about themselves and their world, across time, place, and cultures. Themes should also explore the alternative answers which different peoples have arrived at for the same questions. Themes will
Courses participating in the Upper-Division Thematic
Program must
Effective support for Upper Division Themes is necessary for their success. Each theme
Cultural Diversity Requirement (Section revised 4-17-08; revisions effective fall 2009)
The principal goal of this requirement is for students to gain
insight into intercultural relations and the variety of cultures and
peoples present both in the United States and the world at large. Typically, this requirement will be met by taking two courses. However, single six-unit courses that meet all criteria are
encouraged acceptable .
The General Education Advisory Committee
The General Education Advisory Committee (GEAC) will be responsible for making recommendations to the Provost or designee on the implementation, monitoring, and development of the university's General Education program. Since it will advise the Provost on a major university program, it may either initiate advice or respond to requests for advice. This committee will be comprised of
six faculty
- one elected from each liberal arts college;
- two elected from different professional colleges (four-year terms renewable and staggered), and
- one selected from the Academic Senate's Educational Policies and Programs Committee (one year term, renewable twice);
- one student (one year term, renewable twice); and
- two ex-officio members -- one Provost designee and one member of the Academic Advising Services.
A Coordinator of General Education will be appointed from the committee's faculty members for a term of two years by the Provost and the Chair of the Academic Senate; the Coordinator shall receive appropriate assigned time and shall chair the committee. The Educational Policies and Programs Committee faculty member will be appointed by the Chair of the Academic Senate in consultation with the Provost. The student member will be appointed by the Provost in consultation with the Associated Students.
Program Evaluation
Regular assessment and evaluation of the General Education Program as a whole and of its major components is necessary to ensure its quality and guide its development. The major components of the program will be reviewed by GEAC periodically and cyclically. Sub-Area A4 will be reviewed in conjunction with Area B. For the overall program and for its major components, assessment planning and implementation shall be the responsibility of the appropriate General Education Area Dean(s) and the Provost. Results of the assessment will be reported to the President and to the Academic Senate and campus community at intervals not to exceed seven years.
Course Evaluation
Each course must have an assessment process which shows how well course General Education goals are being achieved. It is the responsibility of the course's faculty and department chair to provide a report on the assessment and proposed changes for GEAC in its scheduled evaluation of courses. (In the case of multiple sections of the same course, a common assessment and proposed changes should be given. ) In all courses, there must be evidence that the assessment information is being applied to improve the course in meeting its part of the goals for General Education.
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Copyright © 1997, 1998, 1999 CSU, Chico |
Revised: 6/99 |