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Southwestern University
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Southwestern University: A Statement
The Academic Program
Degree Requirements
Academic Regulations
Course Descriptions
Brown College of Arts & Sciences
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Economics & Business
Education
English
History
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Sociology & Anthropology
Sarofim School of Fine Arts
Art
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Interdisciplinary Programs
Special Academic Programs
Admission & Financial Aid
Student Life
Cultural Activities
History & Governance
Endowments & Scholarships
University Directory
Board & Officers
Faculty
Administration
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY:
A STATEMENT OF WHO WE ARE
Southwestern possesses a historic and continuing mission that has
guided our development from frontier origins in the Republic of Texas to the
complex international society we confront today. A defining heritage has emerged
from our response to these challenges.
Southwestern originated in pioneering
Texas and finds its identity in entering unfamiliar environments with confidence
and vigor. We were not founded to defend an established order, but to generate
creative responses to altered opportunities and resources. We have surmounted
severe hardship, as in the adversities that led to our arrival in Georgetown,
and subsequently in the Great Depression. Southwestern has also known times of
abundance, and at the beginning of the 20th century it possessed financial
strength and academic distinction. In the 21st century, we face an unprecedented
opportunity, that of attaining national leadership as a liberal arts and
sciences college.
Southwestern stands in a United Methodist tradition of
higher education. Non-sectarian and diverse in its collective life,
Southwestern’s character is shaped by John Wesley’s famous appeal:
“Let learning and vital piety be joined.” Dogmatic rigidity is alien
to our institutional spirit; we hold that ethical commitments and spiritual
identities must welcome and support the swift advance of knowledge. Believing
that none has a permanent monopoly on truth, Southwestern is fundamentally
committed to academic freedom, to the informed debate in which new knowledge,
new ethical insights, and richer spiritualities are grounded. Southwestern also
shares the traditional Methodist concern for social justice: we seek to promote
a sense of social responsibility, and are committed to offering the benefits of
higher education to those who confront adverse financial and social
circumstances.
Southwestern is a human-scale community, at whose center are
meaningful human relationships rather than bureaucratic routines. Students and
faculty, administration and staff, as well as the board of trustees—all
are answerable to face-to-face relationships that impose a level of
responsibility unknown in very large institutions. Our small size and private
character do not mean seclusion from the broader world of social and political
conflict, but afford a distinctive and humane way of engaging that
world.
Participants in this community are citizens; each has a stake in the
destiny of the whole, and all play parts in the decisions that shape the common
life. An emphasis on the fine arts, and the liberal arts and sciences has taken
precedence at Southwestern during the last two decades, and the quest for
national standing has moved toward a successful completion. Southwestern’s
tradition of communal responsibility has provided mutual support and
encouragement amid the rigorous individual and collective striving to excel. The
tradition of mutual cooperation and nurture sustains the environment of teaching
and learning, supporting the ethical development and personal wholeness of
students as their intellectual capacities are challenged.
Southwestern
occupies a culturally diverse and vital setting. In coming to Williamson County,
Southwestern entered a community of farmers and ranchers with distinct economies
that faced each other across the Balcones Fault; here Tejanos, Swedes, Czechs,
Germans, Anglos and African Americans retained their cultural identities. The
cultural, intellectual and social life of Austin—the state
capital—enriches this diversity, and multiplies the resources for personal
and collective development available to members of the Southwestern
community.
Sunbelt prosperity has brought economic vitality and cultural
leadership, placing Central Texas on a national stage. Austin has become an
international center for the emerging information society, and is a focal point
for developing relations between the United States and Latin America.
Southwestern is now responding to the challenges of a global community, in the
effort to move from national standing to national leadership as a liberal arts
and sciences college.
Southwestern University, under the auspices of the United Methodist Church, is committed to undergraduate liberal education involving both the study of and participation in significant aspects of our cultural heritage, expressed primarily through the arts, the sciences, the institutions, and the professions of society. As defined by the members of the Southwestern University community, including faculty, staff, students, alumni, and trustees, the core purpose of Southwestern University is that of fostering a liberal arts community whose values and actions encourage contributions toward the well-being of humanity. To this end, the Southwestern University community has agreed upon a set of core values, that serve as the guiding principles for the institution:
Promoting lifelong learning and a passion for intellectual and personal growth.
Fostering diverse perspectives.
Being true to one’s self and others.
Respecting the worth and dignity of persons.
Encouraging activism in the pursuit of justice and the common
good.
As a teaching-learning community, Southwestern encourages rigorous
inquiry and scholarship, creative teaching, and the expression of free human
life. The University seeks to involve the student in finding a personal and
social direction for life, developing more sensitive methods of communication,
cultivating those qualities and skills which make for personal and professional
effectiveness, and learning to think clearly and make relevant judgments and
discriminations.
A university is more than a collection of courses or programs. At its best a
university provides a coherent and interrelated vision of learning. At
Southwestern, we believe that individual programs should be seen against the
background of this fundamental concept of a university. In a liberal arts
university, the major is accomplished within the context of a student becoming a
broadly educated person. In other words, at Southwestern University, there is
one overarching educational goal that all students pursue: the goal of a liberal
education.
A liberal arts education ranges across many disciplines. It
exposes the student poet to physics and technology and the young accountant to
the history of art. It takes advantage of each subject’s potential for
posing value questions and for displaying problems, facts, ideas, events, and
situations in their full contexts—cultural, scientific, aesthetic,
political, historical, and technological. At its best, it produces generalists
who can think critically and creatively, exercise judgment, sort through
complexities, tolerate ambiguity, communicate effectively, and adapt to change.
At Southwestern, we believe a liberal education is the most important
educational goal because it offers personal enrichment, broadening one’s
comprehension and deepening one’s capacities for a fuller, more rewarding
life. Concurrently, a liberal education is an excellent foundation for most
careers. A liberal education teaches communication skills, sharpens
decision-making capacities, and develops analytical abilities. Most importantly,
a liberal education is based on a course of study that conveys the skills and
habits for continued learning. It provides an understanding of global events and
the context from which to speculate about tomorrow.
In addition to
exploring new areas of inquiry through elective options, every student’s
academic program at Southwestern has two distinct elements—the General
Education program and the major or area of concentration.
Southwestern’s General Education Requirements offer students a common
experience by bringing them face-to-face with the principles and methods of the
chief branches of human thought and creativity. At Southwestern, all entering
first-year students begin the General Education program with Foundation courses.
These courses satisfy English composition and mathematics proficiency
requirements, as well as provide a common intellectual experience for first-year
students through the First-year Seminar.
These Foundation courses require
students to develop competence in writing, critical analysis, and problem
solving at the very beginning of their college career. In addition, all students
must take courses to satisfy a requirement of computer literacy. Students must
be able to demonstrate knowledge of the operation of computers and understand
how they can be used in problem solving, particularly in relation to their
chosen major field. Building upon these communication and quantitative skills,
all students continue the General Education Requirements by choosing
representative Perspectives on Knowledge courses from the humanities, social
sciences, fine arts, and natural sciences. The Perspectives on Knowledge courses
are so-named because through those requirements, students acquire a broad
perspective, enabling them to graduate with considered values, perceptive
awareness, and purpose, knowing and understanding more about the complexity and
richness of the world around them.
The General Education program and the
major or area of concentration program are complementary, with the General
Education program serving as a foundation upon which students can build a
successful academic program in a field of specialization. Southwestern
undergraduates can choose from approximately 35 majors, many of which offer a
choice of several emphases or concentrations and include a variety of special,
double, and interdisciplinary majors. Maintaining the balance between required
general learning and the major is one of the hallmarks of the quality education
available at Southwestern.
While the Perspectives on Knowledge requirements
ensure a breadth of exposure to the liberal arts, the major allows for the
deeper exploration of a specific discipline. As a part of the major, students
are required to complete an integrative or “capstone” experience.
The precise nature of this obligation depends on each student’s major as
well as particular interests. Most fulfill the requirement with an extended
research paper, a final project, or a special senior seminar. The purpose of
this requirement is to allow students to demonstrate their overall grasp of
their chosen major and show their ability to interrelate that knowledge.
This combination—general requirements and a major—taken within
a personalized setting where close association with the faculty is the norm, is
designed to develop basic intellectual skills of analysis and communication, to
examine the moral and aesthetic dimensions of human culture, and to foster
breadth and depth in theoretical knowledge. It is our belief that all of these
build a foundation for success and fulfillment in personal, professional, and
civic life after graduation.
Southwestern University is committed to the principle of equal opportunity
for all persons without regard to sex, race, color, religion, age, disability,
national or ethnic origin, or any other impermissible factor. Southwestern
University’s commitment to equal opportunity includes nondiscrimination on
the basis of sexual orientation. It is also committed to taking affirmative
steps to see that such opportunities are made available for personnel in
employment, promotion, transfer, recruitment, rates of pay and other forms of
compensation, and selection for training.
Southwestern University is also
committed to equal opportunity for all persons to complete a Southwestern Degree
program. Therefore, no academically qualified applicant will be refused
admission on the basis of factors listed above. Recruitment and the
administration of student financial aid will be conducted on the same
non-discriminatory basis.
Southwestern University, in compliance with
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and with the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1992, recognizes that qualified students who have made
Southwestern University aware of diagnosed disabilities, including specific
learning disabilities, are entitled to an equal opportunity to benefit from the
educational program of the University and that reasonable academic
accommodations may be necessary to provide that opportunity to students with
disabilities.