USC University of Southern California Schedule of Classes

The university’s general education program is structured to provide a coherent, integrated introduction to the breadth of knowledge you will need to consider yourself (and to be considered by other people) a generally well-educated person. In thinking over what is necessary, the faculty identified five principal goals:

  1. to teach students the skills needed for critical thinking, writing and reading;
  2. to teach skills in a specific context, i.e., social issues, cultures and traditions, science and society;
  3. to teach students how to apply these skills so that they can find, evaluate and use the vast amount of information now available via the media, the Internet, new technologies and traditional forms of knowledge;
  4. to teach students to discern and assess the values that underlie various critical positions, and to articulate their own with coherence and integrity; and
  5. to encourage a passion for learning.

The program is divided into two parts: the first part, called “Foundations,” presents courses that give you the “big picture” about (I) the development of western European and American culture, as well as (II) alternative cultural traditions and (III) the basic principles animating scientific inquiry. The second part, called “Case Studies,” provides particular opportunities for you to sharpen your critical intelligence by considering specific (IV) applications of science and technology, (V) works of literature, philosophy and art, and (VI) contemporary social issues of urgency and importance. In addition, all students must satisfy writing and diversity requirements to complete the USC Core.

The freshman year semester of the writing requirement is co-registered with classes in the Social Issues category and a speaker series, helping to build intellectual community among students and faculty in the general education program.

As you look through the courses in each category, try to reach beyond the disciplines with which you are most familiar and comfortable. Draw broadly from the range of academic expertise and choose a thoughtful, provocative selection of “g” courses as your personal general education program. This academic background will serve you well in the future, as a basis for lifelong learning.

General Education Requirements

Foundations:
I. Western Cultures and Traditions one course
II. Global Cultures and Traditions one course
III. Scientific Inquiry one course

Case Studies:
IV. Science and Its Significance one course
V. Arts and Letters one course
VI. Social Issues one course

Writing Requirement:
WRIT 140 Writing and Critical Reasoning one course
WRIT 340 Advanced Writing one course

Additional information is available online at www.usc.edu/ge.

Transitional General Education Requirements

Students who began college before fall 1997 and entered USC before fall 2000 should speak to their academic advisors.

General Education

Category I: Western Cultures and Traditions

COLT 151xg Modern Western Literature and Culture
HIST 102g Medieval Civilization
HIST 103g The Emergence of Modern Europe
HIST 200gm The American Experience
PHIL 155g Modern Philosophy and the Meaning of Life
PHIL 220g Science, Religion, and the Making of the Modern Mind

Category II: Global Cultures and Traditions

ANTH 263g Exploring Culture Through Film
ANTH 273g Shamans, Spirits and Ancestors: Non-Western Religious Traditions
EALC 110g East Asian Humanities: The Great Tradition

Category III: Scientific Inquiry

CHEM 105aLg General Chemistry
GEOL 107Lxg Oceanography
GEOL 108Lg Crises of a Planet
PHYS 151Lg Fundamentals of Physics I: Mechanics and Thermodynamics

Category IV: Science and Its Significance

EXSC 205Lxg The Science of Human Performance

Category V: Arts and Letters

ARLT 100g Arts and Letters
ARLT 101g Studies in Arts and Letters

Category VI: Social Issues

GEOG 257g Environment and Ethics

Diversity

COMM 395m Gender, Media and Communication
CTCS 192m Race, Class, and Gender in American Film
HIST 200gm The American Experience
HIST 245gm Gender and Sexualities in American History
MUSC 400m The Broadway Musical: Reflection of American Diversity, Issues, and Experiences
SOCI 342m Race Relations
SWMS 301m Introduction to Feminist Theory and the Women’s and Men’s Movements