GE Course Requirements

The following table summarizes the general education course and credit hour requirements for bachelor's degrees completed at Lindenwood. The requirements have been approved by the university. The School of Accelerated Degree Programs (ADP) offers both Bachelor of Arts (BA) and Bachelor of Science (BS) degrees, depending on the major selected. The BA and the BS differ in mathematics and statistics requirements. The notes following the course descriptions explain that difference. All other general education requirements and clusters remain the same for both the BA and the BS degrees. Clusters, transfer credits, or CLEP (College Level Examination Program) credit may be used to fulfill general education requirements.

Students must complete at least three credit hours in each of the 14 areas below, for a total of at least 42 credit hours of general education coursework. Note that the Human Diversity requirement may be completed at the same time as a GE subject-area requirement. For example, if a student completes a course that is designated as both GE-Social Science and GE-Human Diversity, the course may be used to fulfill both GE requirements.

  Courses Designated Required Hours
Core
Composition GE-English  (3.1) 3
Composition GE-English (3.1) 3
Math GE-Math (1.1.2) 3
U.S. Government or History GE-Human Culture: U.S. History/Government (1.1.7) 3
Natural & Social Science/Math 
Social Science GE-Social Science (1.1.3) 3
Natural Science with Lab GE-Natural Science Lab (1.1.1) 3
Social or Natural Science Elective GE-Social Science or GE-Natural Science, GE-Natural Science (1.1.1 or 1.1.3) 3
Social Science, Natural Science, or Math Elective GE-Math, GE-Social Science, GE-Natural Science, or GE-Natural Science Lab (1.1.1 or 1.1.3 or 1.1.7) 3
Human Culture
Arts GE-Human Culture: Arts (1.1.11) 3
Literature GE-Human Culture: Literature (1.1.4) 3
Elective (non-literature, non-arts GE-Human Culture: U.S. History/Government, World History, Foreign Language, Foreign Culture, Religion, Philosophy (1.1.5, 1.1.6, 1.1.7, 1.1.8, 1.1.9, or 1.1.10) 3
Elective GE-Human Culture (any) 1.1.4, 1.1.5, 1.1.6, 1.1.7, 1.1.8, 1.1.9, 1.1.10, 1.1.11 3
Electives
GE Elective GE (any) 3
GE Elective GE (any) 3
Human Diversity 
Note: The GE-Human Diversity requirement may be met in one of two ways. Students may (1) complete six credit hours of GE coursework that fulfills both the GE-Human Diversity requirement and another GE requirement simultaneously or (2) select six credit hours of coursework that counts for only GE-Human Diversity.) 
Human Diversity GE-Human Diversity (2.5)  
Human Diversity GE-Human Diversity (2.5)  

ADP General Education Courses

ADP General Education Courses

Before selecting courses each quarter, students should consult with their advisor and the catalog for major-specific direction regarding general education requirements. Special consideration is needed for students with transfer credits from other universities and colleges.

ADP General Education (GE) courses are offered in a variety of configurations to best fit individual student's needs and interests. GE courses are offered in nine credit hour clusters, in six credit hour clusters, and as single classroom and online courses.

Composition (3.1)

The Composition Cluster (IEN 10100/IEN 10200/IEN 20000) or equivalent is required for all students who enroll in the Accelerated Degree Program with the following exceptions:

1. Any student who successfully completed ENGL 15000/ENG 15000/EPP 15000 and ENGL 17000/ENG 17000 with grade of C or above at Lindenwood University.

2. Transfer students will be required to take a writing placement exam. Based on the results of that exam, transfer students with credit for Composition I and Composition II from another regionally accredited institution may be eligible to have the IEN 10100 Composition I and IEN 10200 Composition II requirements waived.

In order to advance beyond the Composition Cluster (IEN 10100 Composition I, IEN 10200 Composition II, IEN 20000 Introduction to Literature), a student must meet the criteria set by the University by earning a “C” or above in Composition I and Composition II. Students who do not meet these standards must repeat the cluster. Grades earned when repeating the cluster will replace previously earned grades.

Based on the writing placement exam, students may be required to take the co-requisite Composition Cluster (IEN 10050 Foundations of Effective Writing, IEN 10100 Composition I, IEN 10200 Composition II) in lieu of the Composition Cluster. Students must earn a C or better in each class to advance in the program.

IEN 10050Foundations of Effective Writing

3

IEN 10100Composition I

3

IEN 10200Composition II

3

IEN 20000Introduction to Literature

3

Mathematics/Numeracy (1.1.2)

IMH 12100Introduction to Contemporary Mathematics

3

IMH 13200Quantitative Management Applications

3

IMH 14200Basic Statistics

3

IMH 22000Research Design and Methodology

3

*IMH 10200 is required for students who have not earned transfer credit for a GE-Mathematics course OR do not pass, or do not choose to take, the Math Placement Test. It does not fulfill any GE requirements, but the credit hours are counted as electives.

 **IMH 12100 is one of three options that fulfills the GE mathematics requirement for all BA degrees and BS in Business Systems Development, BS in Criminal Justice, BS in Cyber Security, and BS in Information Technology.

 *** IMH 132000 is one of three options to fulfill the GE mathematics requirement for all BA degrees, BS in Criminal Justice, and BS in Information Technology. IMH 13200 or College Algebra or higher is required for the BS in Business Administration, BS in Health Management, and BS in Human Resources Management.

**** IMH 14200 is required for all Bachelor of Science (BS) degrees.

***** IMH 22000 is one of three options that fulfills the GE mathematics requirement for all BA degrees, BS in Criminal Justice, and BS in Information Technology. The course may also fulfill a GE elective for all majors.

 

US History & Government (1.1.7)

IHS 10600American History

3

IPS 15500American Government: The Nation

3

World History (1.1.8)

IHS 10000World History Since 1500

3

IHS 1010020th Century World History

3

Social Sciences (1.1.3)

IBA 23011Principles of Microeconomics

3

IBA 23012Principles of Macroeconomics

3

ICJ 10100Criminology

3

IHR 23021Survey of Economics

3

IPY 10000Principles of Psychology

3

IPY 10500Family Psychology

3

IPY 10700Psychology for Living Today

IPY 15700Psychology of Leadership

3

IRC 20600Leisure in Contemporary Society

3

ISC 10200Basic Concepts of Sociology

3

ISC 21400The Family

3

ISC 22000Social Problems

3

Natural Science (1.1.1)

IBS 10700Human Biology

3

IBS 10800Biology of the Human Body

3

IES 10500Survey of Geology

3

IES 11000Introductory Meteorology

3

IES 11100Meteorology Lab

1

IES 13200Introductory Astronomy with Lab

4

INS 10500Chemistry in Society

3

INS 11400Principles in Environmental Biology

3

INS 11500Environmental Biology Laboratory

1

INS 21400Ethical Problems in Science

3

Arts (1.1.11)

IRT 21000Concepts of Visual Arts

3

IRT 35700Ancient Art

3

IRT 35800Medieval Art

3

IRT 35900American Art

3

IRT 38300Renaissance Art

3

IRT 38900Art Theory and Criticism

3

Literature (1.1.4)

ICL 25000Myth and Civilization

3

IEN 20000Introduction to Literature

3

IEN 20100World Literature I

3

IEN 20200World Literature II

3

IEN 20600British Literature II

3

IEN 23500American Literature I

3

IEN 23600American Literature II

3

IEN 27600African-American Literature

3

IEN 30000Introduction to Literary Theory and Criticism

3

Philosophy (1.1.5)

IPH 10000Survey of Philosophy

3

IPH 15000Foundations of Philosophy

3

IPH 21200Aesthetics: The Philosophy of Art

3

IPH 21400Ethics

3

IPH 30500Political Philosophy

3

IPH 31100Ancient Philosophy

3

Religion (1.1.6)

IRL 15000World Religions

3

IRL 20200Religion in America

3

Foreign Culture/Human Diversity (1.1.10 & 2.5)

ICL 21000Native American Indians

3

ICL 25000Myth and Civilization

3

ICL 31200History of Russia II

3

ICL 32000Chinese Art and Culture

3

ICL 32100Issues in Modern China

3

ICL 33000Japanese Art and Culture

3

ICL 33100Issues in Modern Japan

3

ICL 33700Russian Authors

3

ICL 36100Art and Culture of Latin America

3

ICL 36200Issues in Modern Latin America

3

IEN 20100World Literature I

3

IEN 20200World Literature II

3

IEN 27600African-American Literature

3

IHS 10000World History Since 1500

3

IHS 1010020th Century World History

3

IPS 30000Comparative Analysis

3

IRT 35700Ancient Art

3

IRT 35800Medieval Art

3

IRT 38300Renaissance Art

3

IRT 38900Art Theory and Criticism

3


Human Diversity Definition (ILO 2.5):

We define diverse perspectives as exposure and exploration or examination of ethnic, religious, and cultural perspectives, or of class, race, gender, age, sexual orientation, or ability.

Within this context, diverse perspectives courses will either:

1. Have a majority of the material address the experiences of historically marginalized communities within the     United States.

    OR

2. Have a majority of the course material cover peoples and cultures outside of the United States.

    OR

3. Have the course material comprise a combination of those groups mentioned in the first two criteria.