Table 5-1A VCCS Degree Requirements
Area
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Distribution
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General Education
General education is that portion of the collegiate experience that addresses the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and values characteristic of educated persons. It is unbounded by disciplines and honors the connections among bodies of knowledge. The associate degree programs within the VCCS support a collegiate experience that focuses on seven goal areas: communication; critical thinking; cultural and social understanding; information literacy; personal development; quantitative reasoning; scientific reasoning. The general education goal areas outlined below are to be introduced in the foundational courses and enhanced in program and elective courses. (NOTE: Some of the categories include two goal areas when a single course may provide foundations in both goal areas.)
- Foundations In Communication:
Courses designed to enable students to interact with others using all forms of communication, resulting in understanding and being understood.
- Foundations In Critical Thinking And Information Literacy:
Courses designed to enable students to evaluate evidence carefully and apply reasoning to decide what to believe and how to act, and to recognize when information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and use it effectively.
- Foundations In Cultural And Social Understanding:
Courses designed to enable students to have an awareness, understanding, and appreciation of the interconnectedness of the social and cultural dimensions within and across local, regional, state, national, and global communities.
- Foundations In Personal Development:
Courses designed to enable students to strive for physical well-being and emotional maturity.
- Foundations In Quantitative And Scientific Reasoning:
Courses designed to enable students to possess the skills and knowledge necessary to apply the use of logic, numbers, and mathematics to deal effectively with common problems and issues, and to adhere to a self-correcting system of inquiry (the scientific method) and rely on empirical evidence to describe, understand, predict, and control natural phenomena.
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Minimum 15 credits
(Students must take at least one course in each of the five areas listed, to total at least 15 credits.)
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Program Requirements
Major Field Core
Related/Specialization Courses
Electives
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Minimum 15 credits*
Maximum 15 credits
0-15 credits
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Totals |
AA/AS/AA&S:
60-63 credits ** |
AAA/AAS:
65-69 credits *** |
* Language in Section 5.1.0.0.1 of the VCCS Policy Manual states 25% of the courses in the degree program (15-18 credits) must be common across majors within a degree. The shared courses must be major or related/specialization courses.
** Credit range for engineering programs is 60-72 semester hour credits.
*** Credit range for AAA/AAS programs is 65-69, including nursing. For other programs in the Health Technologies, the range is 65-72 semester hour credits.
Table 5-1B Minimum Requirements for Associate Degrees in the VCCS
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Minimum Number of Semester Hour Credits |
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General Education: |
(1)
AA |
(2)
AS |
(3)
AA&S |
(4)
AAA / AAS |
|
Communication (a) |
6 |
6 |
6 |
3 |
|
Humanities / Fine Arts |
6 |
6 |
6 |
3 |
|
Foreign Language (Intermediate Level) |
6 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
Social / Behavioral Sciences |
9 |
9 (b) |
9 |
3 (c) |
|
Natural Sciences / |
7 |
7 |
7 |
0 |
} 3 (c) |
Mathematics |
9 |
6 (d) |
6 (d) |
0 |
Personal Development (e) |
2 |
2 |
2 |
2 |
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Other Requirements for Associate Degrees: |
|
|
|
|
|
Major field courses and electives (columns 1-3) |
18-21 |
24-27 |
24-27 |
49-53 (f) |
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Career/technical courses (column 4) |
____ |
____ |
____ |
____ |
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Total for Degree (g) = |
60-63 |
60-63 (h) |
60-63 (h) |
65-69 (h) |
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Notes: The VCCS Policy Manual, Section 2-IV-C, defines general education within the VCCS. Sections 2.7.3, 3.4.10, and 3.5.1 of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) Principles of Accreditation specify general education requirements. Colleges must address all SACS requirements, the SCHEV Core Competencies, and the general education goal areas listed in this VCCS Policy Manual.
|
(a) |
Must include at least one course in English composition. |
|
(b) |
Only 6 semester hours of social/behavioral sciences are required for engineering majors who plan to transfer to a baccalaureate degree engineering program that requires 6 or fewer hours in this category, provided that the college/university publishes such requirements in its transfer guide. |
|
(c) |
While general education courses other than those designed for transfer may be used to meet portions of these requirements, SACS principles require that general education courses be general in nature and must not “.. narrowly focus on those skills, techniques, and procedures peculiar to a particular occupation or profession.” |
|
(d) |
Only 3 semester hours of mathematics are required for the General Studies major. |
|
(e) |
Personal development includes health, physical education, or recreation courses that promote physical and emotional well being and student development courses. Must include at least one student development course. |
|
(f) |
AAA/AAS degrees must contain a minimum of 15 semester hours of general education. Students should plan to take at least 30 hours in the major; the remaining hours will be appropriate to the major. |
|
(g) |
All college-level course prerequisites must be included in the total credits required for each program. |
|
(h) |
Credit range for engineering programs is 60-72 semester hour credits. Credit range for AAA/AAS programs is 65-69, including nursing. For other programs in the Health Technologies, the range is 65-72 semester hour credits. |
Table 5-2 Minimum Requirements for Diplomas, Certificates, and Career Studies Certificates
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Diploma |
Certificate |
Career Studies Certificate |
Definition |
A two-year curriculum with an emphasis in a career/technical area |
A curriculum that consists of a minimum of 30 semester credit hours |
A program of study of not less than 9 nor more than 29 semester credit hours |
Course Requirements |
May include any appropriate courses numbered 10-299 |
May include any appropriate courses numbered 10-299 |
May include any appropriate courses numbered 10-299 |
General Education Requirements |
A minimum of fifteen percent (15%) of credit hour requirements shall be in general education, including 1 three-credit English course. |
A minimum of fifteen percent (15%) of credit hour requirements shall be in general education, including 1 three-credit English course. |
There are no general education requirements. |
Graduation Requirements |
See p 5-8
- 25% of courses must be taken at home institution.
- 2.0 GPA
- Graduation honors eligible
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See p 5-8
- 25% of courses must be taken at home institution.
- 2.0 GPA
- Graduation honors eligible
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See p 5-8
- 25% of courses must be taken at home institution.
- 2.0 GPA
- Not eligible for graduation honors
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Approval |
State Board for Community Colleges |
Chancellor |
Local College Board |
General Education Goals
The importance of providing every graduate with a strong background in general education is reflected in both the structure and content of the associate degree programs at Virginia Western Community College. Programs typically devote twenty-five percent or more of the credits required for graduation to the study of general education courses, including at least one course from each of the following: Humanities/Fine Arts, Social/Behavior Sciences, Natural Sciences/Mathematics, and Health/Physical Education. These general education courses, specialized courses in the major field, orientation sessions, and extracurricular activities, are designed to provide each graduate with a collegiate experience that supports the development of the following general education goals:
Communication
A competent communicator can interact with others using all forms of communication, resulting in understanding and being understood. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- understand and interpret complex materials;
- assimilate, organize, develop, and present an idea formally and informally;
- use standard English;
- use appropriate verbal and non-verbal responses in interpersonal relations and group discussions;
- use listening skills;
- recognize the role of culture in communication.
Critical Thinking
A competent critical thinker evaluates evidence carefully and applies reasoning to decide what to believe and how to act. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- discriminate among degrees of credibility, accuracy, and reliability of inferences drawn from given data;
- recognize parallels, assumptions, or resuppositions in any given source of information;
- evaluate the strengths and relevance of arguments on a particular question or issue;
- weigh evidence and decide if generalizations or conclusions based on the given data are warranted;
- determine whether certain conclusions or consequences are supported by the information provided;
- use problem solving skills.
Cultural and Social Understanding
A culturally and socially competent person possesses an awareness, understanding, and appreciation of the interconnectedness of the social and cultural dimensions within and across local, regional, state, national, and global communities. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- assess the impact that social institutions have on individuals and culture-past, present, and future;
- describe their own as well as others’ personal ethical systems and values within social institutions;
- recognize the impact that arts and humanities have upon individuals and cultures;
- recognize the role of language in social and cultural contexts;
- recognize the interdependence of distinctive worldwide social, economic, geopolitical, and cultural systems.
Information Literacy
A person who is competent in information literacy recognizes when information is needed and has the ability to locate, evaluate, and use it effectively (adapted from the American Library Association definition). Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- determine the nature and extent of the information needed;
- access needed information effectively and efficiently;
- evaluate information and its sources critically and incorporate selected information into his or her knowledge base;
- use information effectively, individually or as a member of a group, to accomplish a specific purpose;
- understand many of the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information and access and use information ethically and legally.
Personal Development
An individual engaged in personal development strives for physical wellbeing and emotional maturity. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- develop and/or refine personal wellness goals;
- develop and/or enhance the knowledge, skills, and understanding to make informed academic, social, personal, career, and interpersonal decisions.
Quantitative Reasoning
A person who is competent in quantitative reasoning possesses the skills and knowledge necessary to apply the use of logic, numbers, and mathematics to deal effectively with common problems and issues. A person who is quantitatively literate can use numerical, geometric, and measurement data and concepts, mathematical skills, and principles of mathematical reasoning to draw logical conclusions and to make well-reasoned decisions. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- use logical and mathematical reasoning within the context of various disciplines;
- interpret and use mathematical formulas;
- interpret mathematical models such as graphs, tables and schematics and draw inferences from them;
- use graphical, symbolic, and numerical methods to analyze, organize, and interpret data;
- estimate and consider answers to mathematical problems in order to determine reasonableness;
- represent mathematical information numerically, symbolically, and visually, using graphs and charts.
Scientific Reasoning
A person who is competent in scientific reasoning adheres to a self-correcting system of inquiry (the scientific method) and relies on empirical evidence to describe, understand, predict, and control natural phenomena. Degree graduates will demonstrate the ability to:
- generate an empirically evidenced and logical argument;
- distinguish a scientific argument from a non-scientific argument;
- reason by deduction, induction and analogy;
- distinguish between causal and correlational relationships;
- recognize methods of inquiry that lead to scientific knowledge.
Computer Competency
Virginia Western Community College ensures that students are able to demonstrate college entry-level computer skills necessary for academic success and discipline-specific skills necessary for successful transfer or employment.
Program Competencies
The AS and AA degree programs are designed for students who plan to transfer to a four-year college or university baccalaureate degree. Upon completion of an AA or AS program, the graduate should have:
- A broad, general education and the knowledge and skills required of all associate degree students at Virginia Western;
- Computer literacy competencies required of all associate degree students at Virginia Western;
- The educational knowledge and skills resulting from completing a core of major courses that will provide support for the student’s transfer goals;
- The course work needed to transfer as an upper-level student to a four-year college or university with little or no loss of credit;
- The academic background and study skills needed to succeed after transferring to a baccalaureate degree program.
AAS degree programs are designed to prepare students for direct entry into the job market in technical and paraprofessional fields. A few of the programs also prepare students to transfer to selected baccalaureate degree programs. Upon completion of an AAS degree program, the graduate should have:
- A broad, general education and the knowledge and skills required of all associate degree students at Virginia Western;
- Computer literacy competencies required of all associate degree students at Virginia Western;
- The educational background and occupational training necessary for immediate employment;
- The skills and knowledge needed to perform satisfactorily on the job;
- The course work necessary to transfer to and succeed in baccalaureate degree programs that accept transfer students from technical degree programs.
Certificate programs are designed to prepare students for direct entry into the job market as technicians, skilled, and semi-skilled workers. Upon completion of a certificate program, the graduate should have:
- A background in general education;
- The educational background and occupational training necessary for immediate employment;
- The skills and knowledge needed to perform satisfactorily on the job.
Career Studies programs are designed to prepare students for direct entry into the job market in occupational fields that require entry-level skills and knowledge. Some of the programs also provide persons already employed with an opportunity to upgrade their skills and knowledge. Upon completion of a career studies program, the graduate should have:
- Entry-level skills and knowledge needed for immediate employment in selected fields;
- The skills and knowledge needed to perform satisfactorily on the job;
- Up-to-date knowledge and skills in a designated occupational area.
Outcomes Assessment Requirement
Students may be required to take one or more tests designed to measure general education achievement and/or achievement in selected major areas prior to graduation for the purpose of evaluation of academic programs. No minimum score or level of achievement is required for graduation. Test results will remain confidential and will be used for the sole purpose of improvement of the college.
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