The institution requires the successful completion of a general education component at the undergraduate level that:
(a) is based on a coherent rationale; and
(b) is a substantial component of each undergraduate degree program. For degree completion in associate programs, the component constitutes a minimum of 15 semester hours or the equivalent; for Bachelor’s programs, a minimum of 30 semester hours or the equivalent.
(c) It must also ensure breadth of knowledge. These credit hours include at least one course from each of the following areas: humanities/fine arts, social/ behavioral sciences, and natural science/mathematics. These courses must not narrowly focus on those skills, techniques, and procedures specific to a particular occupation or profession. [CR]
x Compliance o Non-Compliance o Partial Compliance
The institution
requires that all undergraduates complete a 42-hour general education core, which includes a 3-hour Freshman Seminar.
The coherence of
the University’s rationale for the General Education Core curriculum is ensured
by several factors, including direction from the Louisiana BOR and
SACSCOC, alignment with the mission of the University and the curricular structure of undergraduate degree programs, and oversight of the General
Education Committee.
These factors ensure that undergraduate students in every discipline receive
appropriate instruction in a variety of disciplines, beyond the focus of their
majors. All undergraduate students acquire breadth of knowledge by completing a
42-hour General Education Core
Curriculum as part of their
degree requirements. This core is composed of courses in English Composition,
Mathematics, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Natural Sciences, Literature,
History, Communication, and Fine Arts, plus a first-year seminar developed as
part of the QEP in 2010, and revised as a three-credit general education class in 2014.
Table 9.3 – 1 lists on the left the BOR
general education requirements, and on the right the General
Education Core with corresponding course options at UL Lafayette.
Table 9.3 –
1: Comparison of BOR and UL Lafayette General Education Cores
Board
of Regents Core |
University
of Louisiana at Lafayette Core |
||||
English
Composition (6 hours) Effective
written communication skills are essential to prepare students to effectively
and intelligently communicate in a variety of contexts. ENGL 101-ENGL 102 or
the equivalent. |
English Composition
(6 hours) ENGL 101 and ENGL
102 (or equivalent course) |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
Natural
Sciences (9 hours) Biological Sciences BIOL 121, 122,
300, 303 ENVS 150 Physical Sciences ENVS 100, 280 GEOL 105, 106,
110 PHYS 160, 170,
213 CHEM 101, 102 |
||||
|
Humanities (9
hours) Literature and Humanities (3 hours) ENGL 201, 202,
205, 206, 210, 211, 212, 215, 216, 312, 319, 320, 371, 332, 333, 341, 342,
350, 370, 380, 381 FREN 302, 322,
311, 392 SPAN 302, 320,
340 GERM 311 HUMN 115, 151,
152, 200 Historical Perspective (3 hours) HIST
100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 221, 222, 223, 224, 307, 330, 355, 343, 351, 352,
321, 322 Communication and Language (3 hours) CMCN 100, 212,
202, 203, 302, 310, 345 ENGL 223, 360,
365 THEA 261 FREN 101, 102,
201, 202, 216, 301, 316, 332, 361, 362 SPAN 101, 102,
201, 202, 216, 301, 310, 316, 330, 332 GERM 101, 102,
201, 202, 216, 360 ARAB 101, 102 ASL 101, 102,
201 |
||||
|
Fine Arts (3
hours) DANC 101, 102,
113, 114 DSGN 121 MUS 100, 104,
105, 106, 108, 109, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 360, 364 THEA 161, 261 VIAR 120, 121,
122 |
||||
|
UNIV 100
First-Year Seminar (3 hours) |
||||
Total: 39 hours |
Total: 42 hours |
The University’s General Education Core is overseen by its
General Education Committee, which first formed in 2006 in response to a
developing understanding of the need to measure, direct, and improve student
learning, and became a standing University committee within Academic Affairs in
AY2008-2009. The General Education Committee exists to “…review, develop, and recommend
policy regarding general education to the CAAS [Committee on Academic Affairs
and Standards], to recommend inclusion or exclusion of courses in the list of
acceptable general education courses, and to participate constructively in
assessment of the general education goals.” Historically, the membership of the
committee has included representatives from most of the core areas,
representatives from each college, the Assistant Vice President for Academic
Affairs – Academic Programs, and the Director of Institutional Assessment.
Recent proposals to revise and clarify membership have been a focus of the committee in AY2018-2019. The coherence of the committee and its relation to the General
Education program are ensured by its membership, which has been revised to
include representatives from each area of the General Education Core, as well
as representatives from each academic college, the Director of Institutional Assessment,
the Assistant Deans of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and representatives at large
from Liberal Arts and Sciences. The committee reports to the Provost through
the Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs – Academic Programs. Changes to
the General Education program are submitted in the Fall to CAAS, then to the
Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs – Academic Programs for review
and inclusion in the Catalog.
The General
Education Committee meets monthly to consider, debate, approve, and amend the General
Education Core curriculum as new courses are proposed, while maintaining
overall compliance with BOR requirements. This programmatic focus and the
active debate that results from it are evidenced by the committee’s minutes, and
the many policy changes emerging from the committee. The
committee has worked to align the University’s General Education curriculum
with the requirements of the Board of Regents and benchmark practices at peer
institutions in an effort to
create a coherent rationale for general education as a whole at UL Lafayette.
The University is committed to maintaining adherence to the
underlying rationale and ensuring the expected breadth of knowledge in its
general education program. The
General Education Committee reviews all general education courses to ensure breadth of focus. When new courses are proposed for
inclusion in the General Education curriculum, they are brought to the General Education Committee and reviewed for satisfaction of the standards
established by that committee for inclusion. If courses meet those standards,
they are approved and submitted to the University Committee on Academic
Affairs and Standards
(CAAS) for review and subsequent inclusion in the Catalog. One recent example of this process was the submission of
Music 106 by the College of the Arts for inclusion in the General Education
curriculum. After considering this course and approving it, the General
Education Committee sent its recommendation to the CAAS, and
then to the Provost for inclusion in the Catalog.
Other recent requests include Music Appreciation: Survey of Film and Music and Music 130: Music Theory II.
Between 2016 and
2018, the General Education Committee reviewed the entire general education
structure, including all categories and courses. Committees were formed to address each disciplinary area of the core: Math, English,
Science, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Humanities, Arts, and UNIV 100. Beginning in August of 2016, each committee
was charged with reviewing and revising the existing goals and objectives for
the discipline, as well as selecting classes that met the goals. Discipline
committees met twice monthly and reported
their progress back to the General Education Committee. In some cases such as
in Humanities, these revisions were major; in
others, such as Mathematics, the fundamental courses, goals, and objectives already in use were judged appropriate, or in need of only minor
adjustments. The reformed structure and associated Assessment Matrix were then approved by the General Education Committee, presented to and then approved by CAAS and the Provost, and were adopted in the 2019-2020 Catalog, along with a new procedure for making changes to the General Education Core.
Campus advisors
in each department or discipline, using degree planner documents available in the Catalog, ensure that students complete the General Education core
in timely fashion for graduation, and each Dean’s office verifies that all
general education requirements were completed before the student is cleared for
graduation. An advising sheet is provided for all General Education
advisors outlining the best choices for students, and individual credit
distribution documents for degree planning purposes may be found in the Undergraduate
and Graduate Academic Catalog under each program’s description. They allow students to assess their progress
towards a degree, gauge their completion of general education hours, and plan
their schedule from semester to semester. The implementation of the advising
software Degree Works in 2018 also allows students and advisors to monitor
progress toward completion of general education degree requirements. A Degree Works audit provides a
complete review of all previous, current, and in-progress coursework,
displaying information on which requirements are completed, and which are outstanding and necessary to complete a
particular degree, major, minor, and/or concentration, as well as alerting
students to gaps in their general education requirements. (Examples show a
Degree Works audit with no general
education credit earned and one with some general education credit earned.)
General Education at the institution is a substantial set of
courses required for undergraduate students by all colleges, programs, and
majors for degree completion. A minimum of 42 General Education credit hours
are required of all students,
exceeding the 30-hour minimum required by the SACSCOC standard and the 39 hours
required by the BOR. Nearly all undergraduate programs are based on 120 credit
hours, making General Education courses 35% of these undergraduate degrees. Several
exceptions, including
Engineering, Education, and Communication, require between 121 and 131 hours;
for these, General Education
courses comprise at least 32% of the degree programs.
General education requirements apply in full to transfer students. Until 2018,
each college was responsible for evaluating transfer students’ transcripts and
awarding them credit for general education classes. Currently, the Registrar’s
Office evaluates general education credit using the Transfer Evaluation System
(TES) to search catalogs from across the country in order to establish course equivalencies. This system is
supported, as appropriate, by a qualitative course assessment performed by the
academic departments that deliver general education courses. Once the student’s
transcript has been processed through the TES evaluation, credit for general
education classes is shown on the UL Lafayette transcript. A record of this
information is maintained on Degree Works, where it is
possible to see the original name of the course and course number, and the
school that granted the credit.
Students who are pursuing online or distance education degrees
must complete the same general education
requirements as students in traditional, face-to-face degree programs.
In BOR Academic Affairs Policy 2.16, the BOR “recognizes that all undergraduate academic credentials
should contain a broad-based common educational experience that enhances
students’ ability to describe, interpret, and analyze their world.” The same
policy requires institutions’ general education courses to “provide an
introduction to a discipline, as in a survey course that covers a wide range of
material within a specific discipline or area of inquiry and acquaints students
with a broad section of the information or skills available in that area, or an
appreciation course that introduces students to a creative field and leads to a
general understanding and appreciation of work by others.” UL Lafayette states that
“[General
Education] courses in the core curriculum ensure broad learning across the
humanities, arts, social studies, and biological and physical sciences, while
teaching competence in technology, communication, critical thinking and
analytical skills.”
The General
Education Core
Curriculum is “designed to
ensure that our graduates acquire the knowledge and skills to live productive
lives as responsible and knowledgeable citizens of the world, capable of
working effectively with others while displaying openness to different
viewpoints and understanding the diversity of human values.” To this end,
courses in the core curriculum ensure broad learning across the disciplines
while teaching competencies in writing, communication, empirical and
quantitative reasoning, personal and social responsibility, critical thinking,
and quantitative and analytical skills.
The University’s General Education Matrix lists the areas of study, learning objectives, and courses for
the entire General Education Core required of all undergraduates, and
demonstrates that the institution follows these principles, offering General
Education courses that are broad and introductory, and not specialized or
focused on specific skills or techniques pertaining to the student’s intended
major or profession. Students are required to take courses from the different
areas comprising the fundamental disciplines of a liberal arts education,
including humanities and fine arts, social and behavioral sciences, and natural
sciences and mathematics. UL Lafayette’s general education requirement exceeds the BOR requirement for breadth by requiring humanities courses in
three separate discipline areas (Literature, History, and Communication).
Students may satisfy one third of their humanities requirement with a
three-hour course in foreign language study, but are still required to take two
additional humanities classes with choices in history, literature, philosophy,
and communication.
Through these
policies, procedures, and initiatives, the University ensures that all of its
students take a broad and substantial core of general education courses that
are based on a coherent rationale, and do not narrowly focus on skills,
techniques, and procedures specific to a particular major or profession.
42-hour General Education Core
Board of Regents AA Policy 2.16
Committee on Academic Affairs and
Standards (CAAS)
Committee on Academic Affairs and
Standards Minutes
Creation of General Education
Committee
Degree Works Implementation Timeline
GenEd Core Committee: Meeting Agendas
General Education Committee meeting
minutes
General Education Committee Minutes
General Education Committee Minutes -
Discipline Committee reports
General Education Committee Mission
General Education Reforms Presented to
CAAS
General Education Requirements
General Education Requirements for
Online Programs
Goals and Objectives for General
Education Math Courses
Music Appreciation: Survey of Film and
Music
Procedure to Change GenEd Classes
Proposals to Revise and Clarify
Membership
Sample Audit with Some General
Education Credit
Sample Degree Audit with No General
Education Credit
Sample Programs Description with
General Education Core
Statewide General Education
Requirement for Breadth
Three-Credit General Education Class
UL Website: Course Equivalencies