Undergraduate Education
The USC Core/General Education
All undergraduates must satisfy the USC Core, which includes general education, writing and diversity requirements. The general education requirements are met with course work provided by the Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences; the same is true for the lower-division writing requirement. The upper-division writing requirement and the diversity requirement may be satisfied with courses offered by the Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences or by some of the university’s professional schools.
General Education Requirements
In the USC general education program, students learn to think critically and to understand the present in historical and cultural perspective — to become generally well-educated people. To achieve this goal, students in all undergraduate programs must complete one course that satisfies each of the following categories:
Foundations:
I. Western Cultures and Traditions
II. Global Cultures and Traditions
III. Scientific Inquiry
Case Studies:
IV. Science and Its Significance
V. Arts and Letters
VI. Social Issues
For more information about the general education requirements, see the course lists here and the description of the program here.
Writing Requirement
In their writing classes, students learn to think critically, to build sound arguments and to express their ideas with clarity. The writing requirement comprises two courses; most students meet this requirement with:
Lower-division requirement:
WRIT 150 Writing and Critical Reasoning — Thematic Approaches
Upper-division requirement:
WRIT 340 Advanced Writing
Certain groups of students may meet this requirement with other course work. For more information on the writing requirement, see here.
Diversity Requirement
The diversity requirement is designed to provide undergraduate students with the background knowledge and analytical skills to enable them to understand and respect differences between groups of people and to understand the potential resources and/or conflicts arising from human differences on the contemporary American and international scene. Students will increasingly need to grapple with issues arising from different dimensions of human diversity such as age, disability, ethnicity, gender, language, race, religion, sexual orientation, nationality and social class. These dimensions and their social and cultural consequences will have important ramifications for students’ personal, professional and intellectual lives, both for the time they are students and in later life. Students will gain exposure to analytical frameworks within which these issues are to be understood and addressed, including social, political, cultural, ethical and public policy analyses. It is the university’s goal to prepare students through the study of human differences for responsible citizenship in an increasingly pluralistic and diverse society.
Course Requirement
The diversity requirement can be met by passing any one course from the list of courses carrying the designation “m” for multiculturalism. In addition to fulfilling the diversity requirement, some of the courses on the list also meet general education requirements; others also meet major requirements; still others meet only the diversity requirement but count for elective unit credit. Courses that meet the diversity requirement are listed here.