bachelor of liberal studies curriculum sheet · 2016-08-16 · • no more than two d’s in...
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![Page 1: BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET · 2016-08-16 · • No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section • 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be completed](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022053019/5f25fe772c36ea195d30cb0e/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS
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BACHELOR OF LIBERAL STUDIES CURRICULUM SHEET GENERAL TRACK
Student Name________________________________ Student ID Number ___________________________
Advisor Name Peggy Clifton (912) 344.2613 Date________________________________________
Area A – Essential Skills 9 hours 1. Communication Skills – 6 hours ENGL 1101 or 1101H – Composition I ______
ENGL 1102 or 1102H – Composition II ______
2. Quantitative Skills – 3 hours MATH 1001- Quantitative Skills and Reasoning ______
MATH 1111 – College Algebra ______
MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______
MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______
Area B – Institutional Options 4-5 hours 1. Ethics and Values
One course selected from: CHEM 2600 – Ethical/Moral Issues in the Sciences ______
CRJU 2020- Ethical Theories and Moral Issues in C.J. ______
ENGL 2000 – Ethics and Values in Literature ______
ETHC 2000 – Interdisciplinary Ethics ______ GNST 2101- Ethics, Values, and Gender ______
HIST 2000 – Ethics and Values in History ______
HONS 2100- Honors Topics in Ethics and Values ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______ POLS 1200 – Ethical Theories in Government ______
SOCI 2500 – Ethics, Values, and the Social World ______
2. Global Perspectives
One course selected from: ANTH 1150 – Global Perspectives in Anthropology ______
CHEM 2200 – Science, Technology/Modern World ______
CRJU 2010 – Universal Justice ______
ECON 1150 – Global Economic Problems ______ ENGL 2050 – Africa and the Diaspora ______ EURO 2000 – Introduction to the European Union ______ FREN 1002 – Elementary French II ______
GEOG 1100 – World Regional Geography ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GRMN 1002 – Elementary German II ______
GNST 2200- Gender in Global Contexts ______
HIST 1111/1112 or 1112H – Civilization I or II ______
HIST 2100 – The African Diaspora ______ HLPR 2010 – Culture, Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment ______
HONS 2000 – Honors Topics in Global Perspectives ______
POLS 1150 – World Politics ______
POLS 2290 - Foundations of International Relations ______
PSYC 2300 - Global Perspectives in Developmental Psyc ______
RELI 2100 - World Religions ______
SOCI 2000 – Global Sociology ______
SPAN 1002 – Elementary Spanish II ______
Area C – Humanities and Fine Arts 6 hours 1. Literature or Philosophy
One course selected from: ENGL 2100 or 2100H – Literature and Humanities ______
FREN 2001/2002- Intermediate French I/II ______
GRMN 2001/2002- Intermediate German I/II ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
SPAN 2001/2002- Intermediate Spanish I/II ______
2. Art, Music, or Theater
One course selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ ARTS 2710 or 2720 – Art History I or II ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______ THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______ THEA 2410 – Oral Interpretation ______
Area D – Science, Math, and Technology 10-11 hours Option I: Non-science Majors
1. One laboratory science course selected from:
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______
CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ GEOL 2010H – Intro to Physical Geology ______
PHSC 1211/1211L – Physical Environment ______ PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
SCIE 1212/1212L – Chemical Environment ______
2. One science course selected from: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro. to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H– Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______ BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______
GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ PHSC 1211 - Physical Environment (lab optional) ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______ SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
3. One math, science or technology course: ASTR 1010 – Astronomy of the Solar System ______ ASTR 1020 – Intro to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy ______
BIOL 1103/1103L – Concepts of Biology ______
BIOL 1107/1107L or 1107H– Principles of Biology I ______ BIOL 1108/1108L or 1108H- Principles of Biology II ______ BIOL 1120 – The Diversity of Life ______
BIOL 1130 – Human Biology ______ BIOL 1140 – Environmental Biology ______ CHEM 1151/1151L – Survey of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1152/1152L – Survey of Chemistry II ______ CHEM 1211/1211L – Principles of Chemistry I ______ CHEM 1212/1212L – Principles of Chemistry II ______
CSCI 1150 – Fund. of Internet and World Wide Web ______
CSCI 1301 – Introduction to Programming Principles ______
ENGR 1112- Intro to Scientific Modeling & Simulation ______ GEOL 2010 or 2010H– Intro to Physical Geology ______ MATH 1113 – Pre-calculus Mathematics ______ MATH 1161 or 1161H – Calculus I ______ MATH 1950 – Applied Math for Non-Science Majors ______ MATH 2200 – Elementary Statistics ______ PHSC 1211 – Physical Environment (lab optional) ______ PHYS 1010- The Physics of Sports ______
PHYS 1111K – Introductory Physics I ______ PHYS 1112K – Introductory Physics II ______ PHYS 2211K – Principles of Physics I ______
PHYS 2212K – Principles of Physics II ______ SCIE 1000 – Introduction to Scientific Inquiry ______
SCIE 1212 – Chemical Environment (lab optional) ______
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Rev. 04/19/16
Area E – Social Sciences 12 hours 1. American and Georgia History and Constitution HIST/POLS 2001 -
Political History of America/Georgia ______
2. World Civilization
One course selected from:
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______
HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______
3. Social Sciences
One course selected from:
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. History or Social Sciences
One course selected from: AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______ ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120 – Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 1111 or 1111H– Civilization I ______ HIST 1112 or 1112H – Civilization II ______ HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______ HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______ POLS 2100 – Introduction to Political Science ______ PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______ SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
Area F – Courses Related To Major 18 hours 1. COMM 2280 – Speech Communication (required) ______
2. One or two courses selected from: ARTS 1100 – Art Appreciation ______
ARTS 2710 – Art History I ______ ARTS 2720 – Art History II ______ ARTS/MUSC 1270 – World of Art and Music ______ MUSC 1100 – Music Appreciation ______
PHIL 2010 – Introduction to Philosophy ______
PHIL 2030 – Intro to Ethics and Moral Philosophy ______
THEA 1100 – Theater Appreciation ______ THEA 1200 – Introduction to Theater ______
THEA 2410- Oral Interpretation ______ OR Two foreign language courses beyond 1001 in sequence
______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
3. One or two courses selected from:
AFAS 2000- Intro to African American Studies ______
ANTH 1102 – Introduction to Anthropology ______
ECON 1101- Survey of Economics ______
ECON 2105 – Principles of Macroeconomics ______
ECON 2106 – Principles of Microeconomics ______
GEOG 2120- Cultural Geography ______
GNST 1101- Introduction to Gender Studies ______
HIST 2111 – History of America to 1877 ______
HIST 2112 – History of America since 1865 ______
ITEC 1050 – Computer Concepts and Applications ______
POLS 2100- Introduction to Political Science ______
PSYC 1101 or 1101H – Introduction to Psychology ______
SOCI 1101 – Introductory Sociology ______
4. One or two courses from Area D (not used for Core Area D) ______________________________________ ______
______________________________________ ______
Other Requirements 61 hours • Minimum of 39 hours at 3000-5000U level or above.
• Maximum of 27 hours in any discipline
• No more than two D’s in Liberal Studies Section
• 9 of the 18 hours in the Liberal Studies Section must be
completed at ASU
• Graduation Exit Exam (MAPP)
Liberal Studies (2000- 5000U level) 18 hours 1. Humanities 3-6 hours
Choice of: art, literature, gender studies, history, philosophy,
or theater.
______ ______
2. Social Sciences 3-6 hours
Choice of: anthropology, criminal justice, economics, geography,
political science, psychology, or sociology. ______ ______ 3. Math, Natural Science and Technology 3-6 hours
Choice of: astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, meteorology, oceanography, or physics. ______ ______
4. Communication Arts 3-6 hours
Choice of: advanced composition, communications, film, foreign
languages, journalism, rhetoric, technical writing.
______
______
Area of Concentration 15 hours 15 credit hours at the 3000 level or above with a grade no lower
than a C for each course. All 15 credit hours must be from the
same Armstrong major, minor or program of study. ______
______
______
______
______
Electives 24-27 hours ______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
______
Physical Education 3 hours PEBC 2001 (3 hours) ______
or
PEBC 2000 (2 hours) and one activity course ______
or
Three one hour PEBC activity courses
______
______ _______________________________ _____
Seminar Course 1 hour
First Year Seminar _____
TOTAL HOURS: 124 CREDIT HOURS