2021-2022 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
General Education Program
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General Education Program Requirements by Content Category
The significance of a university degree is that the graduate possesses certain valuable and important characteristics that transcend any particular major or professional training. Shawnee State University’s General Education Program (GEP), which all graduates must complete, is designed to enhance the various major courses of study in order to ensure that every graduate is a well-educated person. Well-educated people are guided by a spirit of inquiry; they are independent learners, broadly learned and capable of seeking out and understanding new information; they are creative and careful thinkers and communicators; and they are able to take a historical, global, and ethical perspective, which helps them to imagine and pursue change. Most importantly, well-educated people are able to recognize the interconnectivity of ideas from a variety of disciplines. They are also able to balance varying disciplinary perspectives and remain comfortable with ambiguity.
A more complete description of the essential learning outcomes for each category can be found here http://shawnee.edu/offices/general-education-program/
For more information
Michael Barnhart, GEP Supervisor
General Education Program
Vern Riffe Center for the Arts, Room 137
Shawnee State University
940 Second Street
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662-4344
Phone: 740.351.3212
Fax: 740.351.3501 (Provost’s Office)
E-mail: GEP@shawnee.edu
It is suggested that you begin by taking courses in English and mathematics and continue to take courses in these areas until you have completed requirements in English composition and quantitative reasoning.
A more complete description of each category follows. Specific course descriptions are found in their own section of this catalog.
English Composition |
Minimum 6 Hours |
Oral Communication |
3 Hours |
Literature |
3 Hours |
Fine Arts |
3 Hours |
Natural Sciences |
Minimum 7 Hours |
Quantitative Reasoning |
3 Hours |
Engaged Citizenry |
3 Hours |
Global Perspectives |
3 Hours |
Historical Perspectives |
3 Hours |
Ethical Insight and Reasoning |
3 Hours |
Human Behavior |
3 Hours |
Total Hours Required |
40 Hours |
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Note: Additionally, students must take a capstone course and two writing intensive (WI) courses. For students enrolling in 2016 with under 30 semester hours, a required one-credit FYE course must be completed.
GEP Writing Intensive Course Requirements
As part of the General Education Program, all Bachelor-degree seeking students at Shawnee State University are required to pass two courses designated as Writing Intensive (WI), including courses marked as WI from within the GEP categories. The English composition sequence and the capstone course may not be counted toward the GEP Writing Intensive Course requirement. Such courses shall be flagged as WI in both the Course Catalog and Schedule of Classes.
Writing Intensive courses should, whenever possible, be courses within a student’s chosen major. In such cases where a program of study does not offer at least two Writing Intensive courses, any two Writing Intensive courses may be chosen.
To be flagged as Writing Intensive, a course must meet, at a minimum the following conditions:
- The course requires a minimum of 3000 words of total writing. Such writing may include both formal and informal writing. Of this total, a minimum of 2000 words must be academically-sourced, formal writing. This total may reflect multiple assignments.
- Students in the course receive feedback on their writing early enough to allow for alterations and revisions of their written work on future assignments. For example: students may be assigned multiple drafts of one assignment with feedback regarding the revision of that assignment; or, multiple assignments with feedback on each assignment that can help the student improve their writing for the next assignment.
- As writing intensive courses require significant grading and feedback to student, class size may not exceed 30 students.
First Year Experience: University Foundations (1 Hour)
English Composition (6 Hours Minimum)
These courses provide an opportunity for you to develop as a writer. Their goal is for you to learn to write clearly, concisely, and creatively in a variety of formats. Take one of the following courses:
Note:
Two English composition courses must be completed prior to taking coursework at the Integrative Level of the GEP. Oral Communication (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Quantitative Reasoning (3 Hours Minimum)
This component of the General Education Program addresses the nature of mathematical thought and its impact on modern life. To fulfill the quantitative reasoning component of the GEP, each course contains active communication about mathematics (which includes reading and/or writing and/or speaking), exercises designed to stimulate critical thinking, the use of mathematical-related technology, and an emphasis on problem-solving. In addition, each course stresses data and data analysis, demonstrates the application of mathematics to a variety of disciplines, and incorporates activity-based learning. Choose one course from the following list:
Engaged Citizenry (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Ethical Insight & Reasoning (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Fine and Performing Arts (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Global Perspectives (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Historical Perspectives (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Human Behavior (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Literature (3 Hours Minimum)
Choose one course from the following list:
Natural Sciences (7 Hours Minimum)
The natural science component of the General Education Program addresses scientific reasoning.
Choose two courses for a minimum of seven semester hours from the following list. At least one course must have a lab (all courses have a lab component except for GEOL1401, NTSC 1110, and NTSC 1501). (These twelve courses are recommended for students who are not science majors and for students who do not have science courses required in support of their majors: BIOL 1120, BIOL 2253, CHEM 1121, GEOL 1201, GEOL 1202, GEOL 1350, GEOL 1401, NTSC1110, NTSC 1501, NTSC 3850, PHYS 2210, PSCI 2251.)
Note:
Credit is not allowed for both CHEM 1121/2200 and CHEM 1141/1142. Writing Intensive Courses (WI)
The following additional courses were also approved for credit towards the Writing Intensive requirements of the GEP:
Interdisciplinary Capstone
For those programs that have not established a capstone in their majors, students may earn their capstone credit via the following course:
Major Specific Capstones
The following courses provide credit for the GEP capstone requirement within their own major:
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