Teaching general education classes is a crucial part of the work of the faculty at Snow College. As higher education professionals, the faculty seek to offer engaging, rigorous, high-quality, and outcome-based courses that support the overall general education program of the college. Below are resources and lists of outcomes to support this endeavor.
A student who graduates from Snow College with an AS or AA degree:
A student who graduates from Snow College with an AA degree:
A student shall demonstrate reasonable understanding of the history, principles, form of government, and economic system of the United States. Students who fulfill the GE requirement of American Institutions will be able to:
A student shall demonstrate reasonable understanding of and interpret numerical information. Students who fulfill the GE requirement of Quantitative Literacy will be able to:
Writing skills are foundational for success in higher education, crucial for workforce preparation, and a basis for life as an educated person. Classes that meet E1 and E2 GE requirements should focus on developing effective and efficient writing processes and will not privilege course content over composition instruction and practice. Instructors should provide and arrange for detailed feedback on higher-order concerns on multiple drafts of multiple paper assignments. Students should write 15-20 pages of revised prose for each class (including an 8-12 page research paper for E2). Additionally, they instructors should help students address syntax, usage, and mechanical issues in the context of student writing. Class sizes should be kept low (20-25 students) to ensure that instructors can devote enough attention to student work. Finally, E1 and E2 need to be fulfilled by two courses taken sequentially.
Outcomes: General education courses in this area enable students to:
Courses to be designated as a Fine Arts (FA) General Education experience are expected to provide students with an understanding of the basic conceptual frameworks, historical and cultural contexts of artistic works, and be instilled with a sensibility of the creative process. Assessment will occur through the student’s ability to critically evaluate creative works using the language and methodology appropriate to the disciplines of dance, music, theater, and/or the visual arts.
Outcomes: General education courses in this area allow students to be able to:
The Humanities are a group of academic disciplines that study the many ways by which humans have attempted to understand themselves and their world. At Snow College, the Humanities focus on cultural traditions that are expressed largely through text or which have a strong textual component: languages, literature, and philosophy. The methods by which the Humanities study culture are at once analytical and interpretive, objective and subjective, historical and aesthetic.
Outcomes: General education courses in this area enable students to:
Students will develop understanding of the world around them through study of content and the processes used by social and behavioral scientists to discover, describe, explain, and/or predict human behavior and social systems. Students must understand the diversities and complexities of the cultural and social world, past and present, from a social scientist’s perspective, and methodologies, and come to an informed sense of self and others.
Outcomes: A student who earns General Education in the Social and Behavioral Sciences will be able to:
For the natural sciences, science is the systematic inquiry into natural phenomena organizing and condensing those observations into testable models and hypotheses, theories or laws. The success and credibility of science is anchored in the willingness of scientists to:
Broad categories of the Natural Science disciplines include Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry, Geology, Meteorology, and Biology. At Snow College, the first five are considered physical sciences and biology the life science. While properties of matter and energy in the physical sciences are common to life science, the emergent properties resulting from the complexities of life require additional study to amplify and clarify the scientific mechanisms of nature.
Outcomes: A student who has earned Snow College General Education Life Science Learning Outcomes will be able to:
Outcomes: A student who has earned Snow College General Education Physical Science Learning Outcomes will be able to:
A student shall demonstrate reasonable understanding interdisciplinary learning. Students who fulfill the GE requirement of Foundations will be able to: