Students may choose from over 150 major programs in a wide variety of disciplines offered by the three undergraduate colleges. Minor programs, more than 60 in all, are offered by the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and the College of Letters and Science.
Office of Undergraduate Education and Advising
Room 200, Social Sciences and Humanities Building
916-752-0392
World Wide Web: http://www-lsdo.ucdavis.edu/
Major programs in the College of Letters and Science provide students systematic exposure to the key principles, methods, findings and representations of a selected area of study. In pursuing a major, students gain intellectual depth and competency in that subject matter, explore important linkages with collateral fields of inquiry, and are encouraged to engage in independent study.
Most of the academic programs offered through the college are grouped in three divisions: Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies; Mathematical and Physical Sciences; and Social Sciences. One collegewide degree program, the individual major, also is available. A set of majors in the basic biological sciences are offered through both the College of Letters and Science and the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and are administered by the Division of Biological Sciences. Refer to the earlier section, "Division of Biological Sciences," for more information.
These majors focus centrally on the artifacts, expressions and concerns of humankind in various cultures and times. They provide students the opportunity to explore the creation, performance and analysis of works of art, the language and customs of non-English speaking societies, the theory and criticism of literature, and the peoples and cultures of this nation and its hemisphere. Students interested in studying these types of issues may select from more than 20 different majors.
Majors:
Minors:
These majors focus primarily on the description and interpretation of the structure, processes and events of the physical universe. They provide students the opportunity to explore in depth the structure, properties and reactions of substances; fundamental mathematical techniques and models and their application to the interpretation and explanation of phenomena; studies of matter and energy and their interconversions; the nature and development of computer languages; and earth and environmental processes. Students interested in studying these types of subjects may select from seven different majors. The division strongly encourages undergraduates to enroll in undergraduate research projects with one-on-one instruction by faculty scholar/researchers.
Majors:
Minors:
These majors focus largely on issues and problems that characterize social, cultural, political, and economic life across human societies. They provide students the opportunity to explore the relationships between people and the groups and organizations of which they are a part, the antecedents of individual behavior, the development of political and economic systems, the social forces that have shaped the contemporary world, and the foundations of language, thought, knowledge and perception. Students interested in studying these types of issues may select from more than a dozen different majors.
Majors:
Minors:
The opportunity to develop an individual major is available to students in the college whose academic interests cannot be satisfactorily met through the completion of an established major. Individual majors may reflect the most recent trends in scholarship and research and are typically interdisciplinary in nature. The major proposal is developed in close and active consultation with two faculty advisers from the academic disciplines most closely related to the subject matter of the individual major. Careful faculty guidance and review assure that individual majors are comparable in academic rigor and intellectual coherence to those regularly available through the departments and programs of the college.
Major:
View undergraduate programs offered by the other UC Davis Colleges
UC Davis 1997-98 Online General Catalog. Posted August 1, 1997.
catalog-comment@ucdavis.edu
Keitha Hunter and Barbara Anderson, Editors
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