General Education: Student Learning Outcomes
All UW-Green Bay graduates should know and . . .
- Have the ability to communicate effectively
through listening, speaking, reading, writing, and the use of
computers.
- Have the ability to think critically.
- Have the ability to exercise problem-solving
skills - such as problem identification and analysis, and solution
formulation, implementation, and assessment - using an integrated,
interdisciplinary approach.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the
Humanities including the significance and chronology of major events
and movements in Western civilization.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the
Humanities, including a range of literature, representative of
different literary forms and historical contexts.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the
Humanities, including the role of the humanities in identifying and
clarifying individual and social values in a culture and understanding
the implications of decisions made on the basis of those values.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the Natural
Sciences, including major concepts, principles, and theories of the
biological and physical environment.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the Natural
Sciences, including the impact of scientific and technological
activities and products on individuals, society, and the environment.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the Social
Sciences, including major concepts of social, political, geographic,
and economic structures.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the Social
Sciences, including the impact that social institutions and values
have on individuals and groups in a culture.
- Have a fundamental understanding of one or more
of the fine arts, including an understanding of the nature and
functions of art and ways of evaluating art.
- Have a fundamental understanding of contemporary
global issues and problems related to multiculturalism and
ethnocentrism, through the study of beliefs, values, and ways of life
in a country other than the United States.
- Have a fundamental understanding of the causes and effects of stereotyping and racism, and an appreciation of cultural diversity within the United States.