
















 |
Bachelor
of Arts (B.A.) | Bachelor of Business Admin (B.B.A.)
| Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) | Bachelor
of Music (B.M.) | Bachelor of Science (B.S.)
| Bachelor of Science in Nursing (B.S.N.) | Bachelor
of Social Work (B.S.W.) | General Education
Courses
General
Education Program
Annette
M. Sisson, Director
General Education Council
Jimmy Davis, Kim Faison,
Larry German, Zafrullah Khan, Jane Shelby, Richard Shadinger, Judy Skeen,
Andrea Stover, Tommy Wooten.
Vision:
The diverse educational
communities of a comprehensive university have a common interest in liberal
learning. Liberal learning nurtures each students capability for
transforming human culture and complements professional and vocational
pathways. Liberal education involves acquiring fundamental intellectual
skills; becoming conversant with a variety of human ideas, cultural perspectives,
and conceptual frameworks; and developing habits of ethical reflecting
and acting in an interdependent world. This vision of General Education
enables Belmont University to achieve its vision to be a premier teaching
university, bringing together the best of liberal arts and professional
education in a Christian community of learning and service.
Purpose:
General Education
at Belmont University fosters the skills, knowledge, perspectives, values,
and dispositions that will enable students to apply their understandings
and abilities beyond the classroom, encouraging them to become responsibly
engaged in their community and in the world.
Values:
These values will be infused throughout the courses in the General Education
curriculum and pursued through a wide variety of active learning experiences,
all of which seek to meet the learning goals delineated below:
- The importance of life-long intellectual growth and development;
- The importance of moral values and personal commitments;
- The importance of the application of classroom learning to the "real
world";
- The importance of extending the boundaries of learning beyond the
classroom.
Learning Goals:
- General Education seeks to help students develop sophisticated rhetorical
skills, with particular emphasis on written and oral language, including:
- Effective writing
- Effective speaking
- Recognizing, evaluating and constructing written arguments
- Recognizing, evaluating and constructing oral arguments
- Recognizing and evaluating visual images and other forms of non-language-based
communication
- Effective use of technology.
- General Education seeks to help students develop sophisticated critical
thinking (inquiry, reflection, and analysis) skills, including:
- Quantitative reasoning
- Critical reading and reflection
- Engaging and solving complex problems
- Understanding systems and relationships, including interdependencies
and interconnections.
- General Education seeks to help students develop an understanding
and enriched appreciation of the arts, humanities, religion, social
sciences, and natural sciences, including:
- The conceptual frameworks of the arts, humanities, religion, social
sciences, and natural sciences
- The achievements in the arts, humanities, religion, social sciences,
and natural sciences
- General Education seeks to help students develop an understanding
of the complex nature of the world and become responsibly engaged with
that larger whole, including:
- Local, national, international, and global perspectives
- Multiculturalism
- The consequences of individual decisions in an interdependent world
General Education and the International
Studies/Interdependent World Goal:
Learning about cultures
outside the United States and about the interdependent nature of our world
is a fundamental part of the General Education core at Belmont University.
Students will fulfill this goal through one of two methods:
1. Students entering
Belmont University as freshmen or students transferring in fewer than
60 semester hours will address this goal by taking the World History
course(s) that are required for their particular degrees.
2. Students who transfer to Belmont with 60 or more semester hours at
the time of initial admission (including escrow and challenge hours
for RN/BSN students) and who fulfill either condition below will be
waived from taking 3 hours of World History at Belmont (i.e. HIS 102):
- a freshman-
or sophomore-level survey of U.S. history at another institution
OR
- the equivalent
AP credit exam for American History, with a score of 4 or 5.
2.a. However, students
for whom 3 hours of World History is waived still need to fulfill the
"Interdependent World" goal through an alternative means.
These students must EITHER take one of the following courses:
- ENG 231, 232,
or 380
- REL 117
- PSC 130
- any Foreign
Language course
- any appropriate
Belmont course with a "world perspectives" focus, validated
through substitution forms.
OR have transferred in one of the following:
- an equivalent
course from another university
- an official,
credit-bearing Study Abroad program.
2.b. Students
who meet either of the criteria in #2 (see above) AND who have also
completed all of their General Education requirements in English, Foreign
Language/Humanities, Religion, and Social Science before coming to Belmont
are exempt from meeting the "Interdependent World" goal. In
other words, it will be waived altogether as a General Education requirement
for this particular group of transfer students
Curricular Framework:
Students at Belmont
University will take courses in the following areas in order to fulfill
their 41-hour General Education requirement:
| Biological
Sciences |
3 hours |
Physical
Sciences |
3 hours |
| Computer
Proficiency |
0 hours |
Religion |
6 hours |
| Fine
Arts |
3 hours |
Social
Sciences |
3 hours |
| Humanities |
6 hours |
Wellness |
3 hours |
| Math |
3 hours |
World
Civilization |
3 hours |
| Oral
Communication |
3 hours |
Written
Communication |
5 hours |
The following pages
provide specific listings of the General Education requirements at Belmont
University as they have been constituted for each particular degree program.
Within those listings, note the footnotes, which further explain the requirements
and clarify some of the variations for particular programs and majors
within the given degree. For information regarding prerequisite requirements
for various majors, see the sections of the Bulletin that delineate the
majors, noting the Technical Requirements or Tool Requirements."
Bachelor
of Arts (B.A.)
| |
Hours |
| I.
Computer Proficiency |
|
0 |
| GND
105, Computer Proficiency, Level I (1) |
0 |
|
| II.
Oral Communication |
|
3 |
| COM
110, Fundamentals of Speech Communication |
3 |
|
| III.
Written Communication |
|
5 |
| ENG
110, The Writer's Seminar |
4 |
|
| ENG
210, Writing Affiliate |
1 |
|
| IV.
Fine Arts |
|
3 |
| Select
one of the following courses: (2) |
|
|
| ART
200, The Art Experience |
3 |
|
| MUH
200, The Musical Experience |
3 |
|
| TDR
200, The Theatre and Film Experience |
3 |
|
| V.
Foreign Language |
|
6 |
| Select
two courses from the same language, 200 level or above (except GER
320): |
|
|
| CHN,
CLA, FRE, GER, GRK, ITL, JPN, LAT, RUS, and SPA (3) |
|
|
| VI.
Humanities |
|
9 |
| Select
three courses from at least two of the following prefixes: |
|
|
| HUM,
PHI, and ENG/ENGW (4 5 6 7) |
|
|
| VII.
Mathematics |
|
3 |
|
MTH, any course, 100 level and above |
3 |
|
| VIII.
Religion |
|
6 |
| Choose
one path: |
|
|
| a.
REL 111, Old Testament |
3 |
|
| REL
112, New Testament History |
3 |
|
| b.
REL 110, Understanding the Bible |
3 |
|
| plus
one of the following courses: |
|
|
|
REL 114, Jesus in
the Gospels and in Film |
3 |
|
| REL
115, Poverty and Wealth in the Bible |
3 |
|
| REL
116, Ancient Wisdom for Contemporary Issues |
3 |
|
| REL
117, Comparative Spirituality in World Religions |
3 |
|
| IX.
Biological Sciences |
|
3-4 |
| Select
one of the following courses: |
|
|
| BIO
101, Biological Sciences |
3 |
|
| BIO
102, Introductory Molecular and Cellular Biology |
4 |
|
| BIO
111, Principles of Biology |
4 |
|
| Bio 101 is intended
for most non-science majors. BIO 102 and BIO 111,
112 are introductory courses for BIO majors, minors and pre-health
students. |
|
|
| X.
Physical Sciences |
|
3-4 |
| Select
one of the following courses: |
|
|
| PHY
101, Science: A Process of Inquiry |
3 |
|
| PHY
110, Physics of Sound |
3 |
|
| PHY
111, Basic College Physics I |
4 |
|
| PHY
211, General College Physics I |
4 |
|
| CEM
101, Chemistry, Your Environment and You |
3 |
|
| CEM
103, Fundamentals of Chemistry |
4 |
|
| CEM
161, General Chemistry I |
4 |
|
| CEM 101 and PHY 101
are intended for most non-science majors. CEM 161 is the introductory
course for chemistry majors, minors and pre-health sciences. PHY 110
is intended for those with interests in sound. PHY 111 (trigonometry-based)
and PHY 211 (calculus-based)
are introductory courses for science majors and pre-health students.
CEM 161, and PHY 110,
PHY 111, &
PHY 112 have
mathematics prerequisites. |
|
|
|
XI. Social Sciences |
|
6 |
| Choose
no more than one course per category: |
|
|
| a.
ECO 111, Economic Inquiry |
3 |
|
| b. MDS
150, Mass Media and Society |
3 |
|
| c.
PSC 110, Special Topics in General Education: Political Science |
3 |
|
| PSC
121, American Government |
3 |
|
| PSC
130, The United States and World Affairs |
3 |
|
| d.
PSY 110, General Psychology |
3 |
|
|
e. SOC 101, Introduction to Sociology |
3 |
|
| SOC
110, Special Topics in General Education: Sociology |
3 |
|
| XII.
Wellness |
|
3 |
| Choose
one path: |
|
|
| a.
PED 160, Health and Fitness Concepts |
2 |
|
| plus: |
|
|
| PED
200 (8), any course |
1 |
|
| b.
PED 150, Lifetime Fitness |
1 |
|
| plus
one of the following courses: |
|
|
| NUR
110, Wellness Nutrition |
1 |
|
| NUR
131, Healthy Beginnings |
1 |
|
| NUR
132, Women's Health |
1 |
|
| NUR
133, Health Promotion of the Family |
1 |
|
| plus: |
|
|
| PED
200 (8), any course |
1 |
|
| XIII.
World History |
|
6 |
| HIS
101, World History to 1500 |
3 |
|
| HIS
102, World History Since 1500 |
3 |
|
| BA
students may substitute one of the following for one of the two required
courses. However, students are strongly encouraged to take one 100-level
HIS course before attempting an upper-level HIS course. |
| HIS
340, History of Medieval Europe |
|
|
| HIS
342, Renaissance and Reformation |
|
|
| HIS
345, European Ideas and Society, 1600-1800 |
|
|
| HIS
346, European Ideas and Society Since 1800 |
|
|
| HIS
370, History of Central Asia |
|
|
| HIS
380, Modern Latin America |
|
|
| HIS
385, Africa Since 1890 |
|
|
| HIS
410, The United States and the World Since 1945 |
|
|
| HIS
440, Nazi Germany and the Holocaust |
|
|
| HIS
450, Europe in the Age of the World Wars |
|
|
| HIS
470, Colonialism and Empire Since 1500 |
|
|
| HIS
475, Nationalism and Ethnic Identity |
|
|
| HIS
480, The Vietnam War |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
TOTAL |
|
56-58 |
1
Note that some colleges, schools, programs, or majors may require accelerated
computer proficiency certification.
2 Education
majors completing a PreK-4 or a 5-8 license, and students completing any
other appropriate teaching licensure program, must take MUH 214 (4 hrs)
- or, alternatively, MUH 216 (2 hrs) + EDU 254 (2 hrs) - for the Fine
Arts requirement. Also, BA students with a major in Music should take
MUH 211 to fulfill the Fine Arts requirement.
3 Correspondence
work in Foreign Language is not accepted as credit for Belmont students.
Also, students who have had three years or more of a Foreign Language
in high school may be ready to begin language study at Belmont with the
200-level courses. Incoming students with previous language study are
encouraged to consult instructors in each language to determine specific
placement.
4 Exceptions:
As specified in the individual course descriptions, courses that will
not fulfill the Humanities requirements in General Education are ENG 90,
100, 101, 102, 103, 110, 199, 200, 203, 210, 344; ENGW 305, 396, 397;
PHI 199, 225, 299, 311, 315, 316, 322, 333, 399, 405, 410, 420, 425, 440,
490, 499.
5 Philosophy
majors and minors must take PHI 160 as part of the Humanities requirement.
6 Language
majors must take at least one ENG course in literature, at the 200 level
or higher.
7 Classics
majors must take ENG 231 as part of their Humanities requirement.
8 Military
Science and/or Marching Band do not substitute.
.
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