General Education and University Requirements
Consistent with Excelsior’s mission and vision, Excelsior University students must complete two university required courses and meet additional general education requirements in order to complete their degrees. The University Requirements and General Education Requirements support students’ academic success by providing them with essential foundational skills and exposing them to multiple perspectives on the world.
Excelsior’s University and General Education Requirements are designed to highlight important transferable skills that are essential to students’ long-term success in a changing world. All Excelsior University undergraduate students are required to complete a series of core general education and distribution requirements in order to help gain these skills. Students will be assessed by the University in a variety of ways, including skills and abilities acquired prior to admission at Excelsior University, satisfaction of requirements through transfer credit, and during coursework at Excelsior.
University Requirements
Excelsior requires students in all undergraduate degree programs to complete two university requirements (4 credits) as follows.
|
University Requirements |
|
| Information Literacy |
1 credit |
| Cornerstone Course |
3 credits |
| TOTAL |
4 credits |
Information Literacy
- Information literacy is the ability to find, evaluate, interpret, and use information legally, ethically, and effectively. This course introduces students to important knowledge and academic skills in the areas of technological and cyber literacy, the academic knowledge-creation process, library and internet research, source evaluation, reading and processing information, and writing with sources.
- Associate and bachelor's: 1 semester hour within the first thirteen (13) semester hours attempted
- Students must receive a ‘C’ or better in the course to satisfy their University Requirements at Excelsior.
Cornerstone Course
- The purpose of the Cornerstone course is to provide students with the foundational skills and resources for academic and career success and assure a “smart start” to the Excelsior University academic experience.
- Associate and bachelor's: 3 semester hours
- All undergraduate students must complete the cornerstone course in their first term of credit-bearing activity at Excelsior University.
- Students must receive a ‘C’ or better in the course to satisfy their University Requirements at Excelsior.
General Education Requirements
Excelsior University requires a minimum of 21 semester hours at the associate level and 33 semester hours at the bachelor’s level. The minimum credit distribution requirements for Excelsior University undergraduate students are depicted in the following table:
|
Minimum General Education Credit Distribution Requirements for Undergraduate Degrees |
||
|
Distribution Requirements |
Associate Degree |
Bachelor's Degree |
| Humanities Including Ethics |
6 credits |
9 credits |
| Social Sciences and History |
6 credits |
9 credits |
| Natural Sciences and Mathematics |
6 credits |
9 credits |
| Written English |
3 credits |
6 credits |
| TOTAL |
21 credits |
33 credits |
Students must receive a ‘C’ or better in courses to satisfy their General Education Requirements at Excelsior. This includes students who transfer in credit to satisfy General Education Requirements.
Certain general education courses are specifically required by different programs and will be counted toward the general education core. The University catalog should be consulted for the specific requirements within each program, including 1) specific courses that may be required for degree completion, 2) minimum grades accepted for credit, and 3) additional requirements that may need to be met.
See below for details on the fields of knowledge that help satisfy the General Education Distribution Requirements.
Humanities and Ethics
- The humanities focus on the expression and interpretation of the human experience. Through aesthetic appreciation and the development of knowledge and skills in critical thinking and problem solving, these courses examine the human environment with particular attention to diverse heritage, traditions, and cultures.
- Ethics are the principles that guide human behavior and are a cornerstone of every field and profession. Employers need workers who can find innovative, ethical, and practical solutions to a wide variety of problems. In ethics courses and examinations students learn to reflect and analyze positions and issues from a variety of ethical perspectives.
- Associate: 6 semester hours, with 3 semester hours in ethics
- Bachelor's: 9 semester hours, with 3 semester hours in ethics
- Relevant humanities discipline areas include art, music, literature, foreign language, philosophy, religion, speech, or a subject area other than writing.
Social Sciences and History
- The social sciences and history involve the study of individuals and societies and the processes individuals use to order and understand their world. The social sciences focus on theories that explain verifiable phenomena of individual and group human behavior using the scientific method. History is the systematic study of people and events in the past.
- Associate: 6 semester hours
- Bachelor's: 9 semester hours
- Relevant discipline areas include anthropology, criminal justice (theory-based, not applied criminal justice), economics, geography, government, history, political science, psychology, and sociology.
Mathematics and Natural Sciences
- The natural sciences and mathematics are those branches of science that examine the natural world through scientific methods using qualitative and quantitative data.
- Associate: 6 semester hours, with at least 3 semester hours in natural sciences and 3 semester hours in mathematics
- Bachelor's: 9 semester hours, with at least 3 semester hours in natural sciences and 3 semester hours in mathematics
- Relevant discipline areas for natural sciences include astronomy, biology, chemistry, earth science, and physics. For mathematics, relevant disciplines include algebra, geometry, analysis (which includes calculus), and applied mathematics (which includes probability and statistics).
Written English
- Writing classes help students to hone their communication abilities, preparing them for both future academic study and communication in the workplace. The first part of Excelsior University’s Written English Requirement focuses on expository writing: writing to describe, explain, or make an argument. This requirement is met through an introductory composition course. For the second part of the Written English Requirement, students continue to study expository writing at a more advanced level, typically in an intermediate or advanced composition course. Students in some majors (e.g., technology) may have more specific requirements for the second half of the Written English Requirement as determined by the faculty in their school.
- Associate: 3 semester hours in expository writing within the first thirteen (13) semester hours
- Bachelor's: 6 semester hours, 3 semester hours in expository writing within the first thirteen (13) semester hours and 3 semester hours in applied writing or writing within the discipline
Are Exceptions of Policy Allowed?
Information Literacy
Students who have completed a U.S. master’s or higher degree from an institution that is institutionally accredited may be exempt from the Information Literacy requirement if the degree was earned within 10 years prior to admission at Excelsior.
Excelsior alumni and previously withdrawn students who have satisfied the Information Literacy requirement and then enroll/re-enroll in another Excelsior degree program will be required to satisfy the requirement again if the original Information Literacy course is older than 10 years from the admission date for the new degree program.