Core Curriculum
At the center of the Rosary College of Arts and
Sciences education is the core curriculum. The sequence of courses
that make up the core curriculum nourish and sustain the student's
other coursework: they help the student develop a comprehensive
intellectual framework within which to integrate what is learned
elsewhere. Thus, they help the student acquire the skills and
knowledge that are needed if the student is to move comfortably
and competently from one situation–one context–to
another, before and after graduation.
The core curriculum requires students to take three kinds
of courses intended to conduct them through such a course
of study:
- Foundations: courses that equip
students with basic skills fundamental to all other facets
of the undergraduate course of study;
- Area Studies: courses that introduce
students to area studies or "disciplines" practiced
by scholars as they explore materials and apply methods
of inquiry particular to their academic field;
- Liberal Arts and Sciences Seminars:
courses that by applying multiple perspectives to the "big"
questions help students integrate what they are learning
elsewhere.
Liberal Arts and Sciences Seminars
All students enroll each year in Liberal Arts and Sciences
Seminars, courses in which students consider multiple perspectives
on personal, social, and philosophical issues by reading,
discussing, and writing about the seminar topics. According
to their class standing, students choose from a variety of
seminars exploring the topics listed below.
- Freshman Seminar: Dimensions
of the Self (100-level)
- Sophomore Seminar: Diversity,
Culture, and Community (200-level)
- Junior Seminar: Technology,
Work, and Leisure (300-level)
- Senior Seminar: Virtues and
Values (400-level)
While liberal arts and sciences seminars are taught by instructors
from various disciplines representing alternative approaches
to the general topics, they share several features. As seminars,
they are courses in which students, led by an instructor,
investigate problems, design projects, explore resources,
and share findings. They are, that is, courses in which students
learn with and from each other. The seminars are thematic.
Building on prior semesters, they take as departure point
questions that are both universal and urgent, questions that
engage the whole person throughout life. Because all seminars
at each class level share a common general topic and a common
text or texts, they place at the center of students' Dominican
education a shared experience; they embody for students the
distinctive community of learners they have joined.
Finally, the seminars are integrative. They help students
see and articulate connections between information and ideas
originating in other courses; between their coursework and
their lives beyond the classroom; between their own lives
and the lives of others–past, present, and future–in
the communities and, ultimately, the society to which they
belong. And, as seminars, they place the individual student
at the center of this activity of mind: the student, in the
company of others, makes her or his education coherent.
Specifically, the seminars help students:
- develop their skills in critical thinking, reading, writing,
and speaking;
-
synthesize knowledge they are drawing from other courses;
-
learn to collaborate with others in building knowledge and
understanding;
-
reflect on matters intellectual, moral, and spiritual.
For more information, please refer to the Core
Curriculum Handbook or call us at the numbers below or
at (800) 828-8475 outside the Chicagoland area.
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