General Education Vision
Felician University provides a transformative general education experience, engaging our students in connected learning and personal and professional growth to:
- Develop the ability to solve problems through creative and critical strategies
- Foster correlations between new learning and old learning
- Understand the histories, systems, and processes that underlie cultures – both global and American
- Develop a purposeful self, grounded in spiritual values, focused on one’s own wellness, and engaged in academic and professional advancement
- Strengthen communication skills and functional ability in technological & information literacies
Pillar 1: Critical Mind (9 credits):
The Critical Mind Pillar prepares students to reason, integrate, and apply critical thinking and problem-solving skills in innovative and imaginative ways. Through transformative coursework, students will evaluate and synthesize new content creatively and independently to navigate the evolving landscape of the 21st century.
The goals of Pillar 1 are to integrate reasoning and problem-solving strategies to connect content to new ideas, to evaluate new material through an innovative lens and to synthesize new content with existing ideas in innovative and imaginative ways.
English 102 is a required course under Pillar 1 and students may select an additional 6 credits from a list of courses to satisfy this requirement.
Pillar 2: Global and Intercultural Competence for Social Justice (6 credits):
The Global Cultural Competence for Social Justice pillar provides a framework to prepare students to live and work effectively in culturally diverse environments and embrace a commitment to social justice. Through diverse coursework, students become culturally self-aware and knowledgeable about global inequities; develop values and respect for the perspectives of others and become competent in their abilities to promote equity and inclusion in the greater society.
The goals of Pillar 2 are to demonstrate knowledge of one’s own and other diverse cultures, histories, and global events, to identify domestic and global viewpoints of inequity and social justice in terms of economic status, gender, class, race, and ethnicity, to analyze how inequities are perpetuated in a society through political, cultural, social, and economic structures and to exhibit competency and leadership potential in a global and diverse world.
Students may select from a list of courses to satisfy the requirements for Pillar 2. Students who wish to study abroad may seek approval to use study abroad courses to satisfy this requirement as well.
Pillar 3: Ethics, Faith, Spirituality & Well-Being (9 Credits)
Ethics, Faith, Spirituality & Well-Being pillar provides a faith and spiritual framework to prepare students to care for themselves and others with an emphasis on physical, emotional, and social wellbeing. Through introspective coursework, students are supported in developing resiliency, empathy, and spiritual awareness to foster a sense of higher purpose that embodies leadership, citizenship, service, and Franciscan values.
The goals of Pillar 3 are to exhibit a healthy regard for oneself and an ability to foster mutually beneficial relationships with diverse others, to demonstrate professional habits and leadership traits expected in the workplace and for advanced study and to demonstrate the ability to make choices rooted in values that are inspired by faith, spirituality, and a call to a higher purpose.
Students are required to take 2 Religious Studies courses: one at the upper level and one at the lower level
Students may select an additional course from a list of approved courses to satisfy this requirement; approved service-learning courses may also satisfy this requirement.
Pillar 4: The Critical Literacies – Communication, Information, and Technology (14-15 credits)
The Critical Literacies Pillar immerses students in knowledge, skills, and experiences to thrive professionally. Through diverse coursework, students will achieve competencies in data analysis; scientific reasoning; technological and digital skills; written and oral communication, and the professional and ethical applications of this knowledge.
The goals of Pillar 4 are to understand the steps in the process of developing effective communication across different media (brainstorm, organize, draft, revise, edit, publish), to demonstrate technological acumen, flexibility, extraction capabilities, and situational awareness for ethical use across multiple settings, to demonstrate effective communication skills to display comprehension of outside sources (data, readings, labs, etc.) and present claims, findings, or positions and to utilize skills or knowledge developed through critical literacy (data, technological, quantitative, scientific) to advance, deepen, or further analyze a position or topic.
Students are required to take Math (1 Required), Natural Science (1 Required), Computer Science (1 Required), an approved public speaking course (1 Required), and English 101 (Required).
Felician University Signature Courses
UNIV I, II, II: (3 credits)
UNIV IV (Capstone) (2 credits) or an approved upper-level service-learning course in the student’s major.
Writing Intensive Courses
All Felician University students complete 3 Writing Intensive Courses
ENG 101 & ENG 102 are writing intensive courses and satisfy this requirement.
Writing Intensive Course is required in the major; all degree programs have one required course in the major to satisfy this requirement.
Felician University General Education Credit Distribution
Pillar 1: The Critical Mind (9 Credits)
ENG 102 (Required) 3
Option 1 3
Option 2 3
Pillar 2: Global Cultural Competence for Social Justice (6 credits)
Option 1 3
Option 2 3
Pillar 3: The Metaphysical Self – Faith, Spirituality & Well-Being (9 credits)
RELS Lower-Level Option 3
RELS Upper-Level Option 3
Option 3 3
General Education 2025 Implementation - Approved Courses |
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The Critical Mind |
Notes |
Course Number and Title |
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BIO 202 Microbiology |
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CHEM 101 EL, Our Chemical World |
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COMM 150: Media Analysis |
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CRIM 202 Criminal Law |
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CRIM 210 EL, Criminal Investigation |
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CRIM/PHIL 380 Law, Theory and Practice |
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EDU 290: Transition into Teaching |
For Education Majors Only |
EDU 308: Reading Diagnosis and Remediation for Diverse Learners |
For Education Majors Only |
ENG 102-College Research and Writing II |
Required for all students |
ENG 150-Critical Thinking for Persuasion |
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ENV 101, Intro to Environmental Science |
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LS 100: Information Literacy |
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MATH 160 College Algebra |
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MATH 231 Geometry I |
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PHIL 100-Art/Practice of Critical Thinking |
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PHIL 101, Introduction to Philosophy |
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PSCI 102 American Government |
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PSCI 291 Judicial System and Constitutional Law |
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PYSC 101: Introduction to Psychology |
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Global and Intercultural Competence for Social Justice |
Other Notes |
Course Number and Title |
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ART 101: Drawing and Composition |
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ART 102: Design and Color |
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ART 103: Form, Space and Time |
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ART-151 Art Hist Paleolithic to Gothic |
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ART-152 Art History II: Renaissance |
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ART-153 Art History III: Modernism |
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ART 236: Ceramics |
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ART 237: Stained Glass |
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ART 245: Introduction to Web Design |
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ART 272: Painting |
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ART 273: Photography |
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ART 274: Color & Digital Photography |
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ART 275: International Visual Studies in Photography |
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CRIM 110 Criminal Justice I |
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CRIM 230 HC Victimology |
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CRIM 312 Criminology |
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FREN 101: French Language and Culture |
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FREN 102: French Language and Culture II |
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HIST 101: Ancient Societies Through Middle Ages |
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HIST 104: World War I to Present |
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LS 110: Introduction to Global Social Justice |
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MUS 101 Music Foundations |
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MUS 103: Basic Piano |
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MUS 105: World Music |
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MUS 109 Guitar |
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MUS 115: Basic Singing |
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NURS 235: Global Issues in Healthcare |
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NURS 486: Practicum: Population and Community Health |
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PHIL 204 Digital Ethics |
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PHIL 380 Criminal Law Theory & Practice |
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PSYC 290 Social Psychology |
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PSYC 307 Psychology of Sex and Gender |
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PSYC 317 Intercultural Communication |
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PSYCH 330 Multicultural Psychology |
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PYSC 101: Introduction to Psychology |
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RELS 408: Genocide Past, Present and Future |
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SOC 104: Sociology of Race and Ethnicity |
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SOC 200: Cultural Diversity |
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SOC 215 Sociology of Sex and Gender |
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SOC 220 Social Stratification |
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SOC 251 Family and Gender Violence |
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SOC 305: Global Problems and Capitalism |
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SOC 315 Terrorism and Political Violence |
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SPAN 101: Spanish Language and Culture I |
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SPAN 102: Spanish Language and Culture II |
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Ethics, Faith, Spirituality and Well-Being (1 Upper and I Lower-Level RELS course required) |
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Course Number and Title |
Other Notes |
EXSC 140 Health and Fitness |
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EXSC 202 Principles of Health Nutrition and Weight |
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LS 175 Introduction to Environmental Ethics |
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NURS 380: Ethical/Legal Issues in Healthcare |
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PHIL 250 Making Moral Decisions |
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PHIL 309 Morality and the Pursuit of Happiness |
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PSYC 105 Lifespan Development |
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PSYC 311 Biopsychology |
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PSYC 377 Psychology of Health and Illness |
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PSYC 414 Positive Psychology |
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RELS 104 Christianity and the Big Questions |
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RELS 105 Contemporary Moral Issues |
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RELS 205 Varieties of Religious Experience |
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RELS 210 Religion, Spirituality, and the OT |
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RELS 301 Religions of the World |
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RELS 306 Oppression, Liberation, and Theology |
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RELS 310 Moral and Spiritual Dimensions of Health Care |
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RELS 396 Religion in the United States |
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RELS 405 God, Suffering, and Evil |
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RELS 408 Genocide: Past, Present, and Future |
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Critical Literacies |
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Course Number and Title |
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ENG 101: College Writing and Research (Required) |
Required for all students |
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Math (1 Required) |
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MATH 110 Mathematics for Financial Decision-Making |
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MATH 112 Quantitative Reasoning |
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MATH 114 Mathematical Explorations |
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MATH 122 Statistics I |
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MATH 160 College Algebra |
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MATH 161 Precalculus |
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MATH 210 Applied Calculus |
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MATH 212 Topics in Contemporary Math |
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MATH 231 Geometry I |
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MATH 241 Discrete Mathematics |
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MATH 262 Calculus I |
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MATH 263 Calculus II |
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MATH 364 |
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MATH 365 |
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Natural Science (1 required) |
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BIO 111 Medical Terminology |
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BIO 209 Evolution |
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BIO 306 Ecology |
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BIO 102 Human Biology |
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BIO 103 General Biology I |
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BIO 104 General Biology II |
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BIO 200 Toxicology |
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BIO 202 Microbiology |
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BIO 206 Anatomy and Physiology II |
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BIO 205 Anatomy and Physiology I |
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BIO 307: Pathophysiology |
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CHEM 101 Our Chemical World |
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CHEM 103 General Chemistry I |
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CHEM 104 General Chemistry II |
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CHEM 105 Principles of Chemistry |
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CHEM 201 Organic Chemistry |
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CHEM 202 Organic Chemistry II |
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ENV 101 Intro to Environmental Science |
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GSCI 101 Forensic Science |
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GSCI 105 Earth Science |
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PHYS 103 General Physics 1 |
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Computer Science (1 required) |
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CS 102 Computer Application for Educators |
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CS 103 Intro to Adv. Computer Applications |
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CS 120 Intro to Computer Science |
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CS 140 Management Info Systems |
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NURS 225: Health Literacy & Informatics |
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PSYC 249 Fundamentals of Data Management for Psychologists |
May satisfy the computer science requirement for psychology majors only |
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A Public Speaking Course (Req) |
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COM 103: Public Speaking |
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EDU 102: Communication in Educational Settings |
For Education Majors Only |