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General Education Committee

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GENERAL EDUCATION AT UTC

The general education curriculum lies at the heart of the university's mission, providing not just a foundation for academic study but also the tools and intellectual experiences to promote learning long after its students have left campus.  The UTC faculty believes that this curriculum can expand our students'  knowledge base, analytical and communicative faculties, and aesthetic sensibilities, while also fostering a sense of social awareness that is essential for citizenship in our increasingly complex global village.

Specifically, the general education program at UTC aims to equip its graduates to:

  • think analytically, logically, creatively, reflectively and sensitively about the human conditon;
  • think analytically, logically, creatively, and reflectively about natural and abstract structures;
  • collect, process, interpret, and use quantitative and qualitative information, using up-to-date methods, to define and defend viewpoints, solve problems, and make decisions;
  • communicate effectively, especially in writing and speech; engage in civil debate; and collaborate on common tasks;
  • incorporate into their world views a comparative, historical, and global perspective on the diversity of the human experience, including the complex factors that shape individuals, societies, and civilizations as well as knowledge itself.

To accomplish these goals, the UTC faculty has developed a curriculum, overseen and maintained by the Faculty Senate General Education Committee, consisting of six different areas (categories) of intellectual activity:

Taken together, these courses offer students opportunities to explore subjects both within and outside their majors.  The curriculum include offerings from the key disciplines -- humanities, social, and natural sciences --  that have developed to pursue knowledge of the human condition and the universe. It also maintains a balance between courses designed to provide essential fundamental knowledge and those providing outlets for individual intellectual exploration.

The basic organization of the UTC General Education curriculum may be summarized as follows:

Category Course Requirements Number of Hours
Behavioral and social sciences
Two approved courses in the behavioral and social sciences, to be taken in two disciplines unless precluded by departmental requirements.
6 hours
Cultures and civilizations

Option I. One course approved for both Western Humanities I and II, and one approved course in nonwestern cultures and civilizations (total of three courses), OR

Option II: One course approved for World Civilizations I, II, and III (total of three courses).

9 hours
Humanities and fine arts
Two approved courses in the humanities and fine arts, at least one from fine arts.
6 hours
Mathematics and statistics
Two approved courses, one in mathematics and one in statistics.
6 hours
Natural sciences
Two approved courses in the natural sciences, at least one including a laboratory component.
7-8 hours
Rhetoric and composition
Two approved courses in rhetoric and composition.
6 hours

The text of two resolutions passed by the Faculty Council (now, the Faculty Senate) in 1998 concerning a new general education curriculum is available here.