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Core Curriculum

Living Responsibly in an Interdependent World

One of the central goals of the University’s Mission Statement is to "teach students to live responsibly in a diverse and interdependent world." Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s undergraduate Core Curriculum plays an essential role in providing a foundation in the Catholic intellectual tradition. Students will be empowered to make connections among ideas and experiences, across the curriculum and co-curriculum, to synthesize and transfer learning to new situations and beyond campus.

Our integrative Core Curriculum engages students through a variety of courses in the traditional liberal arts as well as the professional disciplines. Core courses are intentionally designed to help students develop a set of skills, such as critical and creative thinking, moral and ethical reasoning, effective communication, and intercultural awareness. Students will learn to adapt disciplinary knowledge and approaches to real-world, complex problems. 

The Core Curriculum helps students develop intentional learning strategies through the use of metacognition–thinking about and reflecting on their own learning, skills, and processes--to identify areas of strength and struggle. These common teaching practices are interwoven throughout all Core courses and serve to increase students' capacity for self-awareness, agency, and life-learning.

The Core requirements are designed to offer maximum flexibility, variety, and choice to all students. By integrating traditional liberal arts courses, major courses, and many paths to satisfying requirements, the Core strives to deliver a robust, common intellectual experience while at the same time being responsive to the varied interests and needs of students.

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*These Core Requirements only apply to students that have matriculated Fall 2024* 

See Core Curriculum Records for requirements prior to Fall 2024

The Core Curriculum is composed of 40-42 credits, organized into five distinct categories or “themes.” 

Category One “Foundations” courses should be completed by year 2. Courses in Categories 2-5 can be taken concurrently or in any order provided any pre-requisites are satisfied. 

While students can choose from a number of course options to satisfy requirements for Categories 2-5, all students are advised to check the current curriculum map for their program to verify if there are any program-required Core courses or semesters that specific Core courses must be taken. 

All courses offered in a category must address at least one designated student learning outcome. 

Core Categories

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The Liberal Arts core is organized into five categories:

Category 1: Foundations of Applied Liberal Arts

Foundations courses prepare students to engage in college-level inquiry through practice in academic writing, critical thinking, examination of ethical issues, and immersion in a language and cultures different from their own. Students will also explore various belief systems and traditions. 

Category 2: Written and Oral Communication

Communication courses build upon the skills students develop in Foundations courses. Students gain valuable practice and competency in spoken/oral presentation skills, opportunities to enhance their written work with technology (such as visual or digital media) so that they can effectively articulate and express their ideas, arguments, and positions across a variety of professional and social contexts. Students also hone their academic writing skills through a second course in English writing or a discipline-focused writing course. 

Category 3: Arts & Culture

Arts & Culture courses engage students in the artistic, social, political, and historic contributions of numerous cultures, movements, and forms of human expression around the globe. Students hone skills that are widely applicable across professions, such as: critical and creative thinking, an understanding of aesthetics and artistic expression, the ability to analyze various works, texts, documents, media, and other cultural artifacts, and problem-solving in order to create new ideas or concepts, and the ability to apply insights and inspiration to real-world scenarios. 

Category 4: Scientific & Quantitative Reasoning

Scientific & Quantitative Reasoning courses develop competency in data analysis, numerical problem-solving, forming and testing hypotheses, and interpreting results. Further, scientific and quantitative concepts can be applied to disparate areas of knowledge, in order to evaluate or critique scientific and numerical claims, methods used, and conclusions offered.  

Category 5: Values, Ethics, & Diverse Perspectives

Diverse Perspectives courses deepen students’ understanding of complex cultural and societal issues through exposure to a wide variety of disciplines and topics that explore the appreciation of differences, unmet human needs, social justice work, and the empowerment of others. Moreover, they foster students’ capacity for empathy and reflection and ability to create personal and professional meaning in their lives and careers. 

Core Attribute Courses

Core Attributes are competencies that all students are expected to encounter and develop through the course of completing their Core and program requirements and may be delivered by any course or discipline. Therefore, they do not require additional courses or credits to be taken. Rather, over the course of their study, students should choose at least one attribute-designated Core or major course for each of the two Core attributes below:

Attribute 1: Information & Digital Literacy (IDL)

Courses with a IL designation teach students how to identify and analyze information sources and types, emphasizing issues of bias, perspective, credibility, and authority in research, professional, and personal contexts. Students learn and use a variety of research tools and resources in order to locate, evaluate, verify, and use information effectively and ethically. 

Attribute 2: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI)

Courses with the DEI designation engage students in theories, ideas, and concepts related to structural racism, allowing students to develop methods and approaches to remove unjust social structures and ensconced, systemic inequalities.

As a result of their courses in the core curriculum, students will be able to:

  1. Demonstrate an awareness of and respect for the religious, spiritual, and moral dimensions of life;
  2. Develop a critical awareness of the whole self, as well as an understanding of the complexities of human persons in diverse historical and social contexts;
  3. Develop and evaluate thinking through quantitative, qualitative, and scientific reasoning; problem solving; and research;
  4. Respond justly and with empathy to social inequity – local, regional and global;
  5. Demonstrate effective communication skills, including skills in a second language at an appropriate level;
  6. Develop an aesthetic appreciation and critical understanding of the visual and performing arts and their cultural importance.

The Core Curriculum addresses 12 distinct learning outcomes that develop competencies in essential and widely-applicable skills grounded in Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s Mission and Core Values.

Core Outcomes were developed from the nationally recognized LEAP Essential Learning OutcomesThe Middle States Commission on Higher Education's general education standards, and the credit requirements of the PA Department of Education and are regularly assessed. 

2016-2024 Core Curriculum Requirements 

Please see the Undergraduate Catalog for specific program requirements.

Questions?

If you have any questions about the core curriculum, please reach out to your advisor or email core@marywood.edu.