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Advisement and Core Curriculum Dr. Paul J. Ballard, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Student Success & Retention
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Graduation Requirements Guiding Principles of SNC’s Advisement Function How Advisement Works at SNC The Liberal Arts and The Core Curriculum Overview
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128 credit hours (8 semesters each with 4 x 4-hour courses) Fulfill the requirements of at least one major Fulfill the requirements of the Core Curriculum Minimum 2.00 cumulative GPA Minimum 2.00 GPA across all major courses Graduation Requirements
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College students are transitioning from adolescence to adult responsibilities and opportunities Advisement is an expression of SNC’s commitment to students’ personal, spiritual, and intellectual development Advisors are a key institutional resource made available to students Guiding Principles of SNC’s Advisement Function
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Advisement leads to creation and maintenance of an academic plan that translates life and career goals into a program of courses The advisor/advisee relationship deepens during a student’s time at the College with benefits that extend long past graduation Guiding Principles of SNC’s Advisement Function
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Summer Advisement – student orientation and registration In the fall, student is assigned a permanent academic advisor, usually a faculty member All classes are cancelled for two days each semester to allow for substantial individual advisor-advisee meetings Students and advisors discuss personal and career plans, and determine a course plan for the remaining semesters Advisors provide many forms of academic and personal advice and mentorship How Advisement Works at SNC
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Programmatic Goals Foundations Courses General Core Requirements Advanced Requirements Elements of Core Curriculum
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The acquisition of intellectual and cognitive skills Understanding the world and one’s place in it Understanding religious and spiritual dimensions of life The development of creativity and self-expression The development of personal character and virtue Core Curriculum Goals
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To be Taken During a Student’s First Year: – Theological Foundations – Philosophical Foundations Required By End of Second Year: – Quantitative Reasoning – Writing Intensive Course Required by End of Third Year: – Second Language Competency Foundations
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Beyond Borders Catholic Imagination Difference and Diversity Expression and Interpretation Individual and Society Physical and Natural World Western Tradition General Core Requirement Areas 4 of the classes can be taken at any time 3 must be taken at the 300- 400 level during junior/senior year One Core or Foundations course must be “Writing Intensive” Courses can “count” for both major/minor and in the core
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