Core CurriculumThe core curriculum offers students an education informed by Catholic tradition, by the liberal arts and sciences, and by the central values of Sinsinawa Dominican-sponsored institutions: truth, compassion, justice, partnership and community. This education fosters in students an understanding of themselves and others as intellectual, moral and religious persons. In distinctive ways, the core curriculum helps students meet the ten central learning goals for all Dominican undergraduates. The core curriculum consists of:
FoundationsEach student before graduation must demonstrate:
Liberal Arts and Sciences SeminarsEach year, students must enroll in and complete with a passing grade an integrative seminar. According to their class standing, they may choose from a wide variety of seminars with some elements in common but offered by instructors representing alternative approaches to the general topics listed below. Seminars invite students to integrate multiple perspectives on personal, social and philosophical issues by reading, discussing and writing about the seminar topic.
All entering freshmen enroll in the freshman seminar during their first semester; the seminar instructor is their academic advisor for the first year. Transfer students begin the seminar sequence at the point at which they enter the university (i.e., students who transfer as sophomores must complete a sophomore, junior and senior seminar; junior transfer students must complete a junior and a senior seminar). A student is classified as a sophomore if 28 semester hours have been completed, as a junior if 60 semester hours have been completed, and as a senior if 90 semester hours have been completed. For purposes of determining the point of entry to the seminar sequence, however, transfer students who enter with total semester hours within seven of a higher classification begin the seminar sequence at that higher classification (i.e., students entering the university with 21 hours begin the sequence with the sophomore seminar; students entering with 53 hours begin the sequence with the junior seminar; students entering with 83 hours are required to complete only the senior seminar). Students studying abroad for a full academic year are exempt from that year’s seminar requirement. |
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DOMINICAN UNIVERSITY |
7900 West Division Street |
River Forest, IL 60305 |
P:708.524.6800 |
F:708.524.5990 |