2020-2021 College Catalog 
    
    Mar 19, 2024  
2020-2021 College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

General Education Program


General Education Program


At College of the Ozarks the General Education Program plays a vital role in the full restoration of students to what it truly means to be human beings created in the image of God. Students engage the Western liberal-arts and American traditions, develop a range of essential skills, and cultivate virtues of Christ-like character guided by faculty and staff who understand and order their lives in accordance with a Christian worldview. The General Education Program helps students integrate knowledge and skills from their academic courses with enriching co-curricular opportunities and the college’s unique work program to form students as whole persons who can faithfully pursue their vocations in family, community, country, and the global society. More specifically, the General Education Program seeks to fulfill the following objectives and learning outcomes.

The objectives of the General Education (GE) program are to

  1. Help students understand, recognize the value of, and critically assess the Western liberal-arts and American traditions from a Christian worldview perspective.
  2. Help students develop essential skills and abilities that mark a person as being well-educated and equip them to live out their vocations in family, church, country, and the global community.
  3. Help students acquire a sound knowledge of the Christian faith.
  4. Encourage students to demonstrate Christ-like character.

The outcomes of the General Education program are that students will

  1. Understand, recognize the value of, and critically assess the Western liberal-arts and American traditions from a Christian worldview perspective.
    A. Identify key people, places, ideas, and institutions that have shaped the Western liberal-arts and American traditions.
    B. Identify math, natural science, and social scientific methods and practices that inform modern society.
    C. Explain key ideas and theories that have shaped the Western liberal-arts tradition.
    D. Apply math, natural science, and social scientific ideas and theories to concrete situations and questions.
    E. Evaluate from a Christian worldview perspective the ideas, methods, and ideologies that have shaped the Western liberal-arts and American traditions.
     
  2. Demonstrate essential skills and abilities that mark a person as being well-educated and equip them to live out their vocations in family, church, country, and the global community.
    A. Critical thinking
    B. Creative thinking
    C. Quantitative thinking
    D. Written communication
    E. Oral communication
    F.  Information literacy
    G. Technological literacy
    H. Cultural awareness
     
  3. Acquire a sound knowledge of the Christian faith.
    A. Identify key individuals and theological themes in the Biblical narrative.
    B. Summarize and explain a Christian worldview and how it relates to competing worldviews.
    C. Apply Christian theology to their own lives, behaviors, and chosen fields of study.
     
  4. Demonstrate Christ-like character as exemplified by these virtues:
    A. Citizenship
    B. Courage
    C. Hope
    D. Humility
    E. Wisdom

General Education Requirements: 46-56 credit hours


Human Society & Community: 13 credit hours


The Created Order: 7-9 credit hours


Choose Three to Five Credits of Mathematics:


  • Mathematics (MAT) (exclude MAT 013 *)

Choose Four Credits of Natural Lab Science:


  • Biology (BIO)
  • Chemistry (CHE)
  • Physics (PHY)

Human Creativity and Flourishing: 9 credit hours


Swimming/Lifetime Wellness


Notes:


Minimum GPA for the General Education program must be 2.0 for graduation.

Students who do not place into college-level Composition or Mathematics will be required to complete the appropriate developmental course,  ENG 013  or MAT 013 .  Students may not drop these courses.  Student will be allowed a maximum of two opportunities to pass these courses and demonstrate the required level of competency.

Transfer equivalency is not guaranteed for college composition courses. Students who desire to transfer in writing courses to meet composition requirements (ENG 103 College Composition and ENG 253 American Rhetoric) must take the College’s Composition Proficiency Exam to determine whether they receive credit for required composition classes or elective credit. This exam is offered regularly on campus.