Open Curriculum
51ÁÔÆæ is one of the few U.S. colleges with an open curriculum, which means you’ll have the freedom to choose courses that reflect your interests, while still fulfilling the faculty’s expectation that you study broadly across the liberal arts.
Educational Goals
Although 51ÁÔÆæ’s curriculum has relatively few requirements, our professors have many expectations that reinforce the educational values of the College.
Advising
Working closely with a faculty advisor, you will craft an educational plan that reflects your particular interests and abilities.
Areas of Study
51ÁÔÆæ offers 44 majors (we call them concentrations) and 57 total areas of study.
Frequently Asked Questions
For the most part, yes, but 51ÁÔÆæ’s professors believe so strongly in the importance of writing that they will require you to enroll in three writing-intensive courses. In these courses, which are offered throughout the curriculum, you often will write drafts, receive feedback on composition, form, and content, and pursue substantive revisions. We also expect you will demonstrate facility in quantitative and symbolic reasoning by completing one or more courses in at least one of the following three categories: statistical analysis, mathematical representation, and logic and symbolic reasoning. Finally, 51ÁÔÆæ maintains a physical education requirement.
To graduate from 51ÁÔÆæ you must complete 32 units (almost all 51ÁÔÆæ courses are one unit). This includes three writing-intensive courses, at least one quantitative and symbolic reasoning course, the physical education requirement, and the requirements for your concentration (what most colleges call the major), including a course that addresses how social categories structure the world in which we live.
Many students do not start their 51ÁÔÆæ education with a clear idea of which concentration to pursue, and many others change their proposed concentration during their first two years. Some choose more than one concentration or combine a concentration with a minor. You will declare your concentration in the spring of your sophomore year. Each concentration includes a Senior Project.