















 |
Bachelor
of Arts (B.A.) | Bachelor of Business Admin (B.B.A.)
| Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) | Bachelor
of Music (B.M.) | Bachelor of Science (B.S.)
| Bachelor of Science in Nursing (B.S.N.) | Bachelor
of Social Work (B.S.W.) | General Education
Courses
Bachelor of Music (B.M.)
| General
Education Core Requirements for B.M. |
41-44
Hours |
| I.
Seminar Sequence |
|
4
to 6 |
| GND
1015, First-Year Seminar |
3 |
|
XXX
3015, Junior Cornerstone Seminar
The hours for the Junior Cornerstone Seminar count
as a Human Experience course. |
0 |
|
| XXX
4015 or GND 4015, Senior Capstone Seminar |
1
or 3 |
|
| II.
Computer Proficiency |
|
0 |
| GND
1050, Computer Proficiency, Level 1 |
0 |
|
| III.
Oral Communication |
|
3 |
| COM
1100, Fundamentals of Speech Communication |
3 |
|
| IV. Written Communication |
|
6 |
| ENG
1010, First-Year Writing |
3 |
|
| ENG
3010, Third-Year Writing |
3 |
|
V. Fine
Arts
|
|
3 |
| MUH
2110, Survey of Music I |
3 |
|
VI. Humanities
Select one courses from the following prefixes:
(Students will receive credit for their study at the 1010 level of
a foreign language only if they also successfully complete the 1020
level of the same foreign language.) |
|
3 to 4 |
| HUM,
PHI, ENL, ENW, CHN, CLA, FRE, GER, GRK, ITL, JPN, LAT, RUS, and
SPA (1,2,3) |
|
|
VII.
Mathematics
Select one of the following courses: (4)
[Transfer
students may count any MTH course100/1000-level
or above] |
|
3 |
MTH
1020, Basic Concepts (3)
MTH 1080, Mathematical Inquiry (3)
MTH 1050, Mathematics for Elementary Teachers
I (3)
CSC 1020, Introduction to Computer Science
(3) |
|
|
VIII.
Religion
Six hours must be done in the same path. Choose six
hours from path "a" or six hours from path "b": |
|
6 |
a. REL
1110, Old Testament History (3) REL
3120, New Testament History (3) |
|
|
b. REL
1100, Understanding the Bible (3)
Plus one of the following courses:
REL 3140, Jesus in the Gospels
and in Film (3) REL
3160, Ancient Wisdom for Contemporary Issues (3) REL
3170, Comparative Spirituality in World Religions(3) |
|
|
IX.
Sciences
Select a courses from the following:
(5,6,7) |
|
4 |
BIO
1110, Principles of Biology (4)
BIO 1020, Introduction to Molecular and Cellular
Biology (4)
CEM 1610, General Chemistry I (4)
CEM 1620, General Chemistry II (4)
PHY 1110, Basic College Physics I (4)
PHY 1120, Basic College Physics II (4)
PHY 2110, General College Physics I (4)
PHY 2120, General College Physics II (4)
|
|
|
X.
Social Sciences
Choose a course from following list: |
|
3 |
| a.
ECO 1110, Economic Inquiry (3) |
|
|
b.
HIS 1010, World History to 1500 (3)
HIS 1020, World History since
1500 (3)
HIS 2010, American Experience
From Colonial to Civil War (3)
HIS 2020, American Experience
From Reconstruction to Cold War (3)
HIS 1990, Special Studies (3)
HIS 2990, Special Studies (3
c. MDS 1500, Mass Media and Society (3)
d. PSC 1100, Special Topics in Gen. Ed.: Political
Science (3)
PSC 1210, American Government
(3)
PSC 1300, The United States and
World Affairs (3)
e. SOC 1010, Introduction to Sociology (3)
SOC 1100, Special Topics in Gen.
Ed.: Sociology (3) |
|
|
XI. Wellness Choose
one path: |
|
3 |
a.
PED 1600, Health and Fitness Concepts (2)
plus:
PED 2000 - 204_ (1)
or
DAN 1101, or 1201 or 1301 or 1401
(1)
(8)
b.
PED 1500, Lifetime Fitness (1)
plus:
PED 2000 - 204_ (1)
or
DAN 1101, or 1201 or 1301 or 1401
(1)
(8)
plus one of the
following courses:
NUR 1100, Wellness Nutrition
(1)
NUR 1310, Healthy Beginnings (1)
NUR 1320, Women's Health (1)
NUR 1330, Health Promotions of the Family (1)
|
|
|
| XII. Elective in General Education |
|
3 |
|
Select
three hours of coursework from any of the General Education disciplinary
areas except Music |
|
|
| Core
Total |
|
41-44 |
1 Correspondence work in Foreign Language is not accepted as credit for
Belmont students. Also, students who have had three years or more of a
Foreign Language in high school may be ready to begin language study at
Belmont with the 2000-level courses. Incoming students with previous language
study are encouraged to consult instructors in each language to determine
specific placement.
2 Exceptions: As specified in the individual course descriptions, courses
that will not fulfil the Humanities requirements in General Education
are ENG 1000, 1010, 1100, 2100, 3010; ENL 1990, 2000, 3440, 4900; ENW
2000, 3050, 3960, 3970; PHI 1990, 2250, 2990, 3150, 3160, 3220, 3330,
3990, 4050, 4100, 4200, 4250, 4400, 4900, 4990.
3 Vocal performance majors should take FRE 1010 or 1020, ITL 1010 or
1020, or GER 1010 or 1020 to fulfill the core Humanities requirement since
they must complete a first-year study of each of these languages to fulfill
their major requirements.
4 Music Education majors seeking K-12 licensure must take MTH 1080 if
they have a score of 25 or above on the Math ACT test; otherwise, they
must take MTH 1110 (College Algebra) to fulfill state licensure requirements.
5 BIO 1110 is an introductory course for BIO majors, BIO minors, and
pre-health students. CEM 1610 is the introductory course for chemistry
majors, minors and pre-health sciences. PHY 1100 is intended for those
with interests in sound. PHY 1110 (trigonometry-based) and PHY 2110 (calculus-based)
are introductory courses for science majors and pre-health students. CEM
1610, PHY 1110, & PHY 1120 have mathematics prerequisites.
6 If students have not met the prerequisites for one of the 4-hour Science
courses included in this catalog listing, they should postpone fulfilling
their Science requirement until Fall 2005, at which time additional Science
courses that fulfill the General Education requirements in Science will
be converted to 4-hour courses, made available to students, and added
to this list.
7 Music Education majors must have course work in both PSY and a lab
science (to meet state licensure requirements. They should take a four-hour
lab-based integrated science course that includes PSY, or alternately,
they may take PSY 1100 (3) and a lab science course (3 or 4 hours), i.e.
either CEM, PHY, or BIO course. Music Education majors should consult
their advisors before taking courses to meet their science requirements.
8 Military Science and/or Marching Band do not substitute.
|