General Education Requirement

The General Education (GE) requirement promotes the intellectual growth of all undergraduates by ensuring that they acquire a breadth of knowledge that will enlarge their perspectives beyond the focus of a major and serve them well as participants in a knowledge-based society. It seeks to stimulate continued intellectual growth by providing students with knowledge not only of the content but also of the methodologies of different academic disciplines. It involves students in the learning process by its expectation of considerable writing and class participation. It encourages students to consider the relationships between disciplines.

The GE requirement has three components:
Topical Breadth, Social-Cultural Diversity and Writing Experience.

Topical Breadth

A GE course in topical breadth addresses broad subject areas that are important to the student's general knowledge. It takes a critical, analytical perspective on knowledge, considering how knowledge has been acquired and the assumptions, theories, or paradigms that guide its use.

Topical breadth courses are grouped into three broad subject areas of knowledge:

  1. Arts and Humanities. Courses in this area provide students with knowledge of significant intellectual traditions, cultural achievements and historical processes.

  2. Science and Engineering. Courses in this area provide students with knowledge of major scientific ideas and applications. They seek to communicate the scope, power, limitations and appeal of science.

  3. Social Sciences. Courses in this area provide students with knowledge of the individual, social, political and economic activities of people.

Social-Cultural Diversity

Courses in social-cultural diversity teach students the significance of the many patterned differences that characterize human populations--particulary differences of gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, religion or social class.

Writing Experience

A GE course in writing experience normally requires a minimum of five pages of writing in a block, which will be evaluated for content, use of language and logical coherence.

Fulfilling the General Education Requirement

Topical Breadth Component: 6 courses

To fulfill the topical breadth component of the General Education requirement you must successfully complete three approved courses in each of the two subject areas of topical breadth other than the one that includes your major. To identify the area of topical breadth to which your major belongs, refer to the chart at the back of this catalog. Each academic major has been assigned to one of the three subject areas of GE topical breadth. If you have any questions concerning the subject area to which your major is assigned, consult your college dean's office.

Social-Cultural Diversity Component: 1 course

To fulfill the social-cultural diversity component of the GE requirement, you must successfully complete one course from the approved list at the back of this catalog.

Writing Experience Component: 3 courses

To fulfill the writing experience component of the GE requirement, you must successfully complete three courses from the approved list at the back of this catalog.

Additional Conditions

  1. Letter grading. All courses taken to fulfill the GE requirement must be taken for a letter grade. No GE credit will be awarded for a course that you take on a Passed/Not Passed basis.

  2. College and university composition requirements. The following GE courses may not be used to satisfy university or college requirements in composition and GE writing experience simultaneously: Communication 1, Comparative Literature 1, 2, 3, 4, English 1, 3, 18, 19, 101, 102, 104A, 104B, 104C, 104D, 104E, Native American Studies 5.

    Remember: You must satisfy the university Subject A requirement before you take any writing experience course for GE credit.

  3. Courses approved for multiple GE components. Courses approved for more than one component of the GE requirement (topical breadth, writing experience and social-cultural diversity) will be accepted toward satisfaction of all components for which the course has been approved.

  4. Approved GE courses. You cannot claim GE credit for any course you completed before it was an approved GE course.

GE Exemption

IGETC, TCC, and UC Reciprocity. You are exempt from the UC Davis GE requirement if you come from a California community college and are certified as having successfully completed the "Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum" (IGETC) or "Transfer Core Curriculum" (TCC), or if you come from another
UC campus and are certified has having successfully completed the lower division breadth or General Education requirements of that UC campus (UC reciprocity).

Approved General Education Courses

A list of the courses that provide General Education credit for 2000-2001 appears in the back of this catalog. These courses may be used to fulfill the GE Requirement for students entering UC Davis in 1996-97 and thereafter. Please note that you cannot claim GE credit for a course you completed before it was an approved GE course. This list is subject to change. You should check the Class Schedule and Registration Guide each quarter for the most current information.

General Education Theme Options

General Education theme options are sets of GE courses sharing a common intellectual theme. Faculty from the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences have worked collaboratively to develop sets of complementary courses in several areas of interest. These GE theme options are not a separate element of the GE requirement, but a way of selecting your GE courses so that you may benefit from a coherent focus of study while completing the GE requirement.

Completion of a theme satisfies the GE requirement for students with majors assigned to the GE topical breadth area of Arts and Humanities. Students with majors assigned to the topical breadth area of either Science and Engineering or Social Science will need to complete additional GE courses in Arts and Humanities to satisfy the campus GE requirement.

Beginning a theme option does not prevent you from later choosing to take other approved GE courses to fulfill the GE requirement. If you choose to mix courses from a theme option and the broader GE course lists, you will need to make sure that the combination of courses you select will complete the campus GE requirement.


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