ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é Curriculum
Promoting Student Choice
Instead of general education or foundation requirements, our students choose a major and two clusters* that interest them, each of which falls into one of the following academic divisions:
- Humanities
- Social sciences
- Natural sciences and engineering
Students also have the option of expanding one or both clusters into a minor or even another major. This allows our students to take ownership of their academic program within a flexible framework and study what they love.
Students are also required to complete the primary writing requirement.
*Engineering students are only required to take only one cluster in another field.
Clusters
Clusters are three-course sequences within a division (humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences) or department. Students have the opportunity to choose among hundreds of faculty-designed clusters or to modify and even custom design their own cluster.
See the for a complete list of available clusters.
Primary Writing Requirement
To help prepare you for your academic coursework, we require that all of our students complete the primary writing requirement. The most common way to satisfy this is to take WRT 105. There are multiple offerings for WRT 105 every semester on a variety of topics, which allows students to choose a subject they’re interested in. Some topics include:
- Philosophy through science fiction
- Disease and society
- Writing about food
- America's national parks
- Visual forms of comedy in film and television
- Contemporary social movements: exploring social and political change
- Diverse languages, diverse identities
- Gender and race in representations of the Middle Ages
- Comics and culture
- Hypothetical realities
See the for more information.
ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é Curriculum in Action
Eva Hansen ’18, a biomedical engineering student at the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é, has traveled to the Dominican Republic twice with the University’s (EWB) student chapter. While there, she helped provide an elementary school with access to clean water.
Because of the unique design of ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é’s undergraduate curriculum, Hansen has been able to augment her major and EWB experience with a “cluster” of courses in public health.
Read more about her experience, and the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é Curriculum in the article .
Courtney Thomas, Jr, ’18, center, created his own neuroeconomics major. He is also a double major in international relations and a Kauffman Entrepreneurial Scholar.
Thomas came to ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é intending to study astrophysics. But he quickly realized that he is better suited to change the world as an “organizer”—as someone with a knack for “understanding how systems work, how people work, and creating a platform and infrastructure for change to take place.”
Read more about his experience in the article .
Michael Lin ’21, an English and business student, chose to attend ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é because it gave him the freedom to study what he wanted.