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| Philosophy | ||
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The
purpose of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ general education core is to ensure
that college students have the broad knowledge and skills to become life-long
learners in a global community that will continue to change.
Because courses in general education should emphasize breadth, they
should not be reduced in design to the skills, techniques, or procedures
associated with a specific occupation or profession.
As a fundamental element of the baccalaureate degree, essential for full
completion of all majors and minors, the general education core is included in
lower division courses, but universities may add general education courses at
the upper division as well.
General education provides critical thinking skills for analysis to
continue to seek truths, to discover answers to questions, and to solve
problems. Specifically, educated
people practice and are literate in the various methods of communication. They recognize their place in the history, culture, and
diverse heritages of Tennessee, the United States, and the world. They
appreciate the web of commonality of all humans in a multicultural world and are
prepared for the responsibilities of an engaged citizenship. They recognize the
ethical demands of our common lives. They
demonstrate the skills and knowledge of the social and behavioral sciences to
analyze their contemporary world. They
are familiar with the history and aesthetics of the fine arts.
They understand and practice the scientific and mathematical view of the
world.
Finally, Tennessee’s general education core provides for its citizens
the means to make a better living. It also, perhaps above all, enables its
citizens to make a better life. |
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