UIS
Graduate and Undergraduate Catalog
Academic
Year 2006 - 2007
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
Margot Duley, Dean
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences contains 20 disciplines,
representing many of the fundamental building blocks of human
knowledge. These disciplines are traditionally clustered into the
Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, Mathematics and Computer Science,
and the Natural Sciences. These are configured into 13 undergraduate
majors, 14 minors, 4 thematic areas of study, 6 graduate degrees,
and 2 graduate certificates.
What binds all of these varied ways of knowing together is the
common intellectual skills they stress – the ability to think deeply
and systematically about significant questions, to communicate well,
and to reach well-researched and sustainable conclusions. The
liberal arts and sciences also hold this central academic value:
freeing the human mind from prejudice and parochialism through
reasoned discourse. The college contributes many of the courses in
the UIS general education curriculum. This curriculum offers many
opportunities for personal enrichment and exploration, and contains
as its organizing principle the concept of engaged citizenship, from
local to global.
College faculty are dedicated teacher-scholars. Teaching is a
central concern and many have been recognized for their excellence
in the classroom. Faculty have also produced many books and articles
as well as exhibits and performances. They also are involved in
mentoring both undergraduate and graduate students in research
projects. The college offers some exceptional classroom, studio,
laboratory, and field facilities. These include new state-of-the-art
classrooms and computer labs in University Hall, two astronomy
observatories, a developing field station on the Illinois River at
Emiquon, and access to science lab equipment, such as a DNA
sequencer, that is unusual in an undergraduate education.
In addition to its newest initiative in providing a first-class
education to traditional-aged students, the college is proud of its
long and innovative record in providing educational access for more
mature students. In 1974, faculty were founding members of the
Council for Adult and Experiential Learning. The Liberal Studies
program gives students the opportunity to design their own degrees.
Through Credit for Prior Learning, students can gain credit for
college-level reasoning acquired through life experiences. The
Applied Study Office is a national pioneer in linking the
theoretical insights gained in the classroom with the world of work
and service through internships (some of them paid) with businesses,
state agencies, and community organizations. Our new online degrees,
taught primarily by our regular professors, provide college access
to time- and place-bound students, using the most modern
technologies to continue our historical mission.
The college also supports co-curricular activities such as the
Visual Arts Gallery, music and theater programming, the Verbal Arts
Festival, field trips, and a variety of program-based student clubs
and academic honor societies.
Degrees and Minors
Bachelor of Arts: Communication, English, History, Liberal
Studies, Mathematical Sciences, Philosophy, Psychology,
Sociology/Anthropology, Visual Arts
Bachelor of Science: Biology, Chemistry, Clinical
Laboratory Science, Computer Science. Master of Arts: Communication,
English, History, Individual Option
Master of Science: Biology, Computer Science
Minors: African-American Studies, Anthropology, Biology,
Chemistry, Communication, Computer Science, English, History,
Mathematical Sciences, Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology, Visual
Arts, Women's Studies
Graduate Certificates: Systems Security, Information
Assurance
Online Degrees
Bachelor of Arts: English, History, Liberal Studies,
Mathematical Sciences, Philosophy
Bachelor of Science: Computer Science
Master of Science: Computer Science
Teaching Certificate and B.A. in Mathematics –
blended
online program
Thematic Areas
Astronomy/Physics
Modern Languages
Music
Theater
www.uis.edu/clas
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