Apr 28, 2024  
2008-2010 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2008-2010 Undergraduate Catalog ARCHIVED CATALOG: CONTENT MAY NOT BE CURRENT. USE THE DROP DOWN ABOVE TO ACCESS THE CURRENT CATALOG.

General Education


 

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Nevada System of Higher Education Core Requirements

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All associate and baccalaureate candidates are required to complete the Nevada System of Higher Education core. Completion of the legislative requirement of United States and Nevada Constitutions is required of all students. Courses used to satisfy the Nevada System of Higher Education Core requirements can simultaneously satisfy the University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core requirements. These Nevada System of Higher Education Core Requirements are included in the UNLV General Education Core Requirements. Specific courses meeting each requirement are listed in the University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core Requirements following this section.

  1. English Requirement. 6 credits. To satisfy the Nevada System of Higher Education’s Freshman English Composition requirement, all students must complete six semester credits of English, normally consisting of English (ENG) 101 and 102. Please see the University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core Requirements for English Composition placement information.
  2. Constitutions Requirement. 4-6 credits. The state law of Nevada provides that no student shall receive a diploma or a teacher’s certificate without previously having passed a satisfactory examination upon the constitutions of both the United States and the State of Nevada in a course of study. Evidence of completion of U.S. and Nevada Constitutions is required of all second baccalaureate degree students whose first degree is not from an NSHE institution. Transfer students who have already successfully completed a satisfactory three semester-credit U.S. Constitutions course from a regionally-accredited institution must successfully complete a satisfactory Nevada constitutions course. For courses offered prior to 2000, please refer to the appropriate catalog course descriptions to determine which ones satisfied the Constitutions requirement.
  3. Mathematics Requirement. 3 credits. Three credits of a lower-division (100 or 200 level) mathematics course.
  4. Natural Science Requirement. 3 credits. Three credits of an introductory level lower-division (100 or 200 level) course. Please see Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking Distribution requirement in the following University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core Requirements section for a complete description of this requirement.
  5. Social Science or Humanities Requirement. 3 credits. Three credits of an introductory level lower-division (100 or 200 level) course in either the social sciences or humanities. Please see the Social Sciences and Humanities and Fine Arts Distribution Requirements in the following University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core Requirements section for complete descriptions.

University of Nevada, Las Vegas General Education Core Requirements

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The UNLV General Education Program is designed to help every student develop a broad intellectual background, gain familiarity with a variety of fields of knowledge, and acquire practical skills necessary for analyzing the culture and the world. Upon completion of the General Education core curriculum, students will be able to think critically and independently and so possess a foundation for life-long learning, professional success, and personal development.

Learning Outcomes of the General Education Core Curriculum

  1. English Composition: Students will demonstrate effective written communication.
  2. World Literature: Students will interpret and compare world literatures.
  3. Constitutions: Students will interpret the U.S. and Nevada Constitutions in broad contexts.
  4. Mathematics: Students will demonstrate quantitative reasoning skill.
  5. Multicultural: Students will analyze contemporary cultures within the United States.
  6. International: Students will demonstrate proficiency in a foreign language or explain how international cultures, societies, or political economics relate to complex, modern world systems.
  7. Distribution Requirements:
  1. Humanities and Fine Arts: Students will critically analyze the relationships of aesthetics, ideas, cultural practices and values to historical and contemporary cultures. Students will critically analyze the aesthetics, ideas, cultural practices, and values that shape individuals and their lives.
  2. Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking: Students will use the methods and models of the natural sciences to define, solve, and evaluate problems. Students will apply logic to solve problems.
  3. Social Sciences: Students will use the methods and models of the social sciences to analyze individual and group behaviors. Students will evaluate how policies affect individual and group behaviors.

To the end of fostering your liberal education, then, the UNLV Core Curriculum stipulates that you will undertake a number of specifically required courses in composition, in literature, in math, and in the study of our U. S. and Nevada Constitutions. In addition, you will choose from a broader array of courses to fulfill UNLV’s distribution requirement. As you will see in more detail in the section that follows this one, students must take three courses, typically totaling nine to 10 credit hours, in each of two content areas that are OUTSIDE the major area of study. The content areas are Humanities and the Fine Arts, Natural Sciences and Analytical Thinking, and the Social Sciences. These two content area distribution requirements of our core allow your major department or college to determine what course work will be required in its own specialized area of study while still ensuring that you will be exposed to a broadly liberal education. The major department or college will also decide what training in computer literacy you need or incorporate such training in your other course work for the major. Please see the listing “Majors and their Distribution Area Assignments” later in this section to see the Major Distribution content areas that are within the major area of study.
Courses that satisfy the Nevada System of Higher Education Core requirements may simultaneously satisfy UNLV’s General Education Core requirements. The UNLV General Education Core requirements must be completed by all baccalaureate degree candidates.

Transfer Students
Transfer students should confer with the UNLV Transfer Center or their college advising center about applicable General Education transfer credit and course substitutions where appropriate.
All students attending UNLV in order to earn a second baccalaureate degree must fulfill the U.S. and Nevada Constitutions requirements. The following students are exempt from all additional requirements of the UNLV General Education Core:

  1. Students awarded a bachelor’s degree from any Nevada System of Higher Education institution.
  2. Students who received an Associate of Arts, Associate of Business, or Associate of Science degree from any Nevada System of Higher Education community college.
  3. Students awarded a bachelor’s degree from any regionally-accredited institution, provided their previous core consisted of a minimum of 30 semester credit-hours of for-credit non-developmental core courses.

Honors College
Students who successfully complete the Core Curriculum of the Honors College automatically satisfy all of the General Education Core requirements.

Petitions and Waivers
Students seeking a waiver of Core Requirements should petition the Faculty Senate General Education Committee at least two semesters before the proposed date of graduation.

General Education Curriculum Requirements

With exception of the Multicultural/International course requirement, UNLV general education core courses cannot be duplicated across general education core curriculum requirements.

  1. English Composition Requirement………..6 credits
    English 101 and 102. These courses should be taken during the student’s first year at UNLV, but no later than the end of the second. Please see the catalog Admissions Section, the UNLV English Composition Program website or the UNLV Class Schedule web-site for current ACT/SAT placement test scores that will guide placement in the appropriate English Composition class. Students with ACT English scores of 30 or higher, or SAT Writing or Critical Reading scores of 680 or higher place out of ENG 101 and need only take ENG 102. Minimum CLEP scores and Advanced Placement scores that satisfy the ENG 101 requirement are listed in the Admissions section of the catalog under the heading Nontraditional Credit. Students interested in alternate placement testing should contact the English Composition Program. Students whose first language is not English may take ENG 113 as an alternative to ENG 101 and ENG 114 as an alternative to ENG 102. All students must take ENG 102 or ENG 114; there is no exemption at UNLV.
  2. Literature Requirement……………………..3 credits
    English 231 or 232 (World Literature I or II)
  3. Constitutions Requirement……………….4-6 credits
    Satisfactory completion of courses examining the constitutions of both the United States and the State of Nevada. Transfer students who have already successfully completed a satisfactory 3 semester-credit U.S. Constitutions course from a regionally-accredited institution must successfully complete a satisfactory Nevada Constitutions course. Current UNLV courses that satisfy these requirements are:
    United States Constitution—HIST 101, HIST 106, HIST 401, HIST 412, PSC 304, PSC 330, PSC 409C, and PUA 241.
    Nevada Constitution—HIST 102, HIST 217, HIST 402, HIST 417A, PSC 100, and PSC 401D.
    Both United States and Nevada Constitutions—HIST 100, HON 111H, HON 112H, and PSC 101.
  4. Mathematics Requirement………………….3 credits
    Any 100 or 200-level MATH course except 115, or 122.
  5. Distribution Requirement……………..18-19 credits
    Eighteen credits to be composed of a maximum of nine credits in each of the two content areas outside of the student’s major distribution area. Please see below for a listing of the correlation of departments to majors and content areas. See the Faculty Senate General Education Webpage for a continuously updated listing of the courses satisfying the content areas designated below.
    The content areas are:
    • Humanities and Fine Arts
      Two courses (three credits each) from two different humanities areas and one introductory or appreciation course (three credits) from a fine arts area. Courses used to satisfy the English Literature or Constitution requirements may not be used to satisfy Humanities distribution requirements
      Humanities courses will be selected from any literature course offered by the English Department, from foreign languages, history (ethnic studies or Afro-American studies if cross-listed with history), philosophy (except PHIL 102, 105, or 114), AAD 201/201D, COM 101, 211, 216, or WMST 113* (or any WMST course cross-listed with English literature, foreign languages, history or philosophy).
    • Fine Arts courses will be selected from AAE 100, AAI 100, AAL 100, ART 101, 107, 111, 112, 135, 160, 216, 260, 261, DAN 100, 101, 103, 104, 165, 166/AAS 166, FIS 100, 110, MUS 101, 121, 125, 127, 129, 134, 176, or THTR 100, 105, 124, 175.

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking
Two courses from the life and physical sciences (at least one of which must be a laboratory course), typically for a total of seven credits, and one three-credit course in analytical thinking.

  • Life and Physical Science courses will be selected from astronomy, ANTH 102, 110L, NUTR 121, biology, chemistry (except CHEM 103), EGG 100, 150, ENV 101, 220, physical geography, geology, or physics.
    Analytical Thinking course: PHIL 102

Social Sciences
One course each from three fields for a total of nine credits. Courses used to satisfy the Constitutions requirement may not be used to meet Social Sciences distribution requirements. Note: AAS, ANTH and ETS constitute one field.

  • Social Science Courses will be selected from AAS or ANTH or ETS (except ANTH 102 or AAS or ETS courses cross-listed with dance, English or history), CED 117, MFT 150, 360, CRJ 104, 270, 435, 436, 438, 469, CST 200, ECON, EGG 307, HED 165, 429, 435, LAS 101, PSC, PSY or EPY 303, SWK 101, SOC, WMST, WMST 113* (or WMST courses cross-listed with any of the above areas). All statistics courses are excluded.
    *WMST 113 may be taken to satisfy EITHER one of the Social Science course requirements OR one of the Humanities course requirements but not both.
  1. Multicultural and International Requirements
    A minimum of six credits to be composed of a three-credit multicultural requirement and a three-credit international requirement that may simultaneously fulfill other general education core requirements. A single course may not meet the multicultural and international requirements simultaneously. To determine courses satisfying these requirements, consult the Faculty Senate General Education Committee Website (http://www.unlv.edu/committees/gec).

Majors and Their Distribution Area Assignments
Students are required to fulfill the distribution requirements of the TWO areas OUTSIDE their major’s distribution area.

Major  Distribution Areas
College of Business  
All Majors  Social Sciences
College of Education  
Early Childhood Education  Social Sciences
Elementary Education  Social Sciences
Physical Education  Social Sciences
Secondary Education  According to teaching field

Anthropology 

Social Sciences

Art

Humanities and Fine Arts

Biological Science 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Chemistry 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Earth Science 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Eng Lit/American Lit 

Humanities and Fine Arts

English (Comprehensive) 

Humanities and Fine Arts

French 

Humanities and Fine Arts

General Science 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

German 

Humanities and Fine Arts

History 

Humanities and Fine Arts

Journalism  

Social Sciences

Mathematics 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Physical Science 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Physics 

Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking

Political Science 

Social Sciences

Social Science (Comp) 

Social Sciences

Spanish 

Humanities and Fine Arts

Speech Communication 

Humanities and Fine Arts

Theatre Arts/Drama 

Humanities and Fine Arts

Special Education 

Social Sciences

Workforce Education 

Social Sciences
Howard R. Hughes College of Engineering  
All Majors  Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking
College of Fine Arts  
All Majors  Humanities and Fine Arts
Division of Health Sciences  
School of Allied Health Sciences  
All Majors  Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking
School of Nursing  
All Majors  Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking
School of Public Health Social Science  
Honors College  
  Please see Honors College program requirements
William F. Harrah College of Hotel Administration  
All Majors  Social Sciences
College of Liberal Arts  
Afro-American Studies  Social Sciences
Anthropology  Social Sciences
English  Humanities and Fine Arts
Foreign Languages  Humanities and Fine Arts
History  Humanities and Fine Arts
Interdisciplinary Degrees  

Asian Studies 

Social Sciences

Cultural Studies 

Social Sciences

Latin American Studies 

Social Sciences

Linguistic Studies 

Social Sciences

Multidisciplinary Studies 

Social Sciences

Social Science Studies 

Social Sciences

Philosophy  Humanities and Fine Arts
Political Science  Social Sciences
Psychology  Social Sciences
Sociology  Social Sciences
Women’s Studies  Humanities and Fine Arts
College of Sciences  
All Majors  Life and Physical Sciences and Analytical Thinking
University College  
University Studies Consult with Advisor
Greenspun College of Urban Affairs  
Communication Studies  Humanities and Fine Arts
Criminal Justice  Social Sciences
Environmental Studies  Consult with Advisor
Human Services Counseling  Social Sciences
Journalism and Media Studies  Humanities and Fine Arts
Public Administration  Social Sciences
Social Work  Consult with Advisor

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