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A New Core Curriculum

Do you remember taking Perspective I and II courses? How about writing intensive or global courses? Soon these courses will be found only in the archives of Nazareth. As of next fall, incoming first year students will have a new core curriculum, one that integrates academic and experiential learning, liberal and professional study, and challenges students to make connections between their courses.

The old core was a wonderfully eye-opening experience for some, but for others it had become stale鈥攋ust a number of hoops to jump through. The original ideas behind the various requirements (like the PIs, PIIs) had largely been forgotten. Consequently faculty and staff looked at national best-practices, consulted with current students, and then put their heads together to design a new core for Nazareth鈥攐ne that preserves the rigor and breadth of the old core but is more explicitly and intentionally focused on inviting students to connect what they鈥檙e learning with what鈥檚 happening in the world, their own life, and what they hope to achieve as professionals. The students who worked with faculty and staff in designing the new core are excited by the degree of control and responsibility it will give them.

In the new core, each requirement is meant to lay the foundation for the next. In the first year, students learn how to ask and explore different kinds of questions (from big, enduring questions to scientific ones). In the second year, they choose an Integrative Studies Question that interests them, then explore it in three upper-level courses and in an experiential learning activity (e.g., service-learning, study abroad, an internship, undergraduate research, student leadership, or a clinical experience or practicum). Finally, in their third year, students take a 鈥渃apstone of the core鈥 seminar in which they formally integrate and reflect on what they鈥檝e learned.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the intentional integration that鈥檚 new,鈥 says Heidi Northwood, Ph.D., director of the core. 鈥淪tudents will be challenged to take responsibility for and integrate their own learning in a way that wasn鈥檛 possible when the core was perceived as a set of unrelated requirements. And with this new emphasis will hopefully come a greater awareness of how the skills and knowledge they get from the study of liberal and professional arts have prepared them for meaningful careers and making the most out of life.鈥

students outside Peckham Hall

For more information, visit naz.edu/core