General Education
General Education Outcomes 2021
A robust general education is founded on the knowledge, concepts, methods, and perspectives that students gain through the study of many academic disciplines. These disciplinary studies stimulate intellectual inquiry, global awareness, and cultural and artistic appreciation: they equip students to make informed judgments and remain engaged beyond the classroom. To that end, QCC promotes educational activities that allow students to demonstrate that they can:
- Communicate effectively in various forms
- Use analytical reasoning to identify issues or problems and evaluate evidence in order to make informed decisions
- Reason quantitatively as required in various fields of interest and in everyday life
- Apply information management and digital technology skills useful for academic research and lifelong learning
- Apply scientific methods and reasoning to investigate issues/problems in the natural and social sciences in order to draw conclusions
To support these institutional general education outcomes, the academic departments—through their programs—may also assess the ability of students to:
- Integrate knowledge and skills in the program of study
- Make ethical judgments while recognizing multiple perspectives, as appropriate in the program of study
- Work collaboratively to accomplish learning objectives
Approved by the Academic Senate on February 13, 2018.
General Education Outcomes 2017
At Queensborough Community College, the General Education learning outcomes are embedded in courses across the disciplines, both in the Common Core and in the Major for each academic program. In December, 2016, the Academic Senate approved a revision of the College's General Education Outcomes (previously revised in May 2007), effective fall 2017:
- Communicate effectively through written and oral forms
- Use analytical reasoning to identify issues or problems and evaluate evidence in order to make informed decisions.
- Reason quantitatively as required in various fields of interest and in everyday life
- Apply information management and digital technology skills useful for academic research and lifelong learning
- Discipline-Specific Outcomes
A robust general education is founded on the knowledge, concepts, methods and perspectives that students gain through study of the social sciences and history, the natural sciences, the arts and the humanities. These disciplinary studies stimulate intellectual inquiry, global awareness, and cultural and artistic appreciation; they equip students to make informed judgments and engage with life beyond the classroom.
5A. Apply concepts and perspectives from history or the social sciences to examine the formation of ideas, human behavior, social institutions, or social processes and to make informed judgments
5B. Apply concepts and methods of the natural and physical sciences to examine natural phenomena and to make informed decisions.
5C. Apply aesthetic and intellectual criteria to examine or create works in the humanities and the arts and to make informed judgments.
Outcomes Supporting General Education
The outcomes below, which support students' General Education, are included in the program specific outcomes for each academic program:
- Integrate knowledge and skills in the program of study
- Make ethical judgments while recognizing multiple perspectives, as appropriate in the program of study.
- Work collaboratively to accomplish learning objectives
General Education Objectives 2007
Students graduating with an associate degree will:
- for transfer programs: meet requirements for successful transfer into upper division of baccalaureate programs
- for career programs: demonstrate mastery of discipline-specific knowledge, skills, and tools required for entry into or advancement in the job market in their field
Educational Objectives
To achieve these goals, students graduating with an associate degree will:
- communicate effectively through reading, writing, listening and speaking
- use analytical reasoning to identify issues or problems and evaluate evidence in order to make informed decisions
- reason quantitatively and mathematically as required in their fields of interest and in everyday life
- use information management and technology skills effectively for academic research and lifelong learning
- integrate knowledge and skills in their program of study
- differentiate and make informed decisions about issues based on multiple value systems
- work collaboratively in diverse groups directed at accomplishing learning objectives
- use historical or social sciences perspectives to examine formation of ideas, human behavior, social institutions, or social processes
- employ concepts and methods of the natural and physical sciences to make informed judgments
- apply aesthetic and intellectual criteria in the evaluation or creation of works in the humanities or the arts
1. Communicate effectively through reading, writing, listening, and speaking
- interpret texts critically
- use writing to create and clarify meaning
- write in varied rhetorical modes, poetic forms and voices
- use writing and oral communication to connect prior knowledge to disciplinary discourse
- apply principles of critical listening to evaluate information
- speak clearly, accurately, and coherently in several modes of delivery
2. Use analytical reasoning to identify issues or problems and evaluate evidence in order to make informed decisions
- distinguish the problem or question from a proposed solution or answer
- differentiate between facts, assumptions, and conclusions in the formulation of a proposed solution or answer
- evaluate the quality of evidence
- describe and compare the way questions, issues, or problems are formulated within various fields of study
3. Reason quantitatively and mathematically as required in their fields of interest and in everyday life
- identify problems that need a mathematical solution, and use computational methods in the mathematics applicable in everyday life
- use the language, notation, and inductive and deductive methods of mathematics to formulate quantitative ideas and patterns
- use mathematics appropriate to specific fields of study
- estimate when doing mathematical calculations
- employ technology to collect, process, and present mathematical information
- describe mathematical, statistical and probabilistic models and methods, and identify how they are used to obtain knowledge
- organize and interpret data and use the data to draw conclusions
4. Use information management and technology skills effectively for academic research and lifelong learning
- determine the extent of information needed for a research question, problem or issue
- access needed information effectively and efficiently
- evaluate information and its sources critically and assimilate selected information
- use information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose
- demonstrate an understanding of the economic, legal, social, and ethical issues surrounding the use of information and information technology
- employ technology in research and fields of interest
- identify the role of technology and its impact on the individual, society and the environment
5. Integrate knowledge and skills in their program of study
- create coherent, documented essays, presentations, or solutions to problems based on gathering, analyzing, and comparing evidence from more than one perspective
- demonstrate critical and creative thought by producing new arguments, art or solutions to complex problems
- analyze and compare evidence to support/refute different points of view on a particular topic
- complete sequential courses that use knowledge and skills from a previous course to master the higher level course
- complete a culminating assignment in a capstone course
6. Differentiate and make informed decisions about issues based on multiple value systems
- identify the key elements of issues and analyze them from the perspectives of multiple value systems
- identify values and their origins in culture, religion, philosophy, political, social or economic theory
- differentiate ethical and non-ethical elements in arguments and/or behavior
- distinguish facts from values in issues
- apply varying values or ethical principles and approaches to respond to questions, dilemmas, or problems and describe alternate outcomes
7. Work collaboratively in diverse groups directed at accomplishing learning objectives
- work in groups to accomplish learning tasks and reach common goals
- demonstrate interpersonal skills and accountability in working in diverse groups
- design and complete a group project
- write or make a presentation based on group work
8. Use historical or social sciences perspectives to examine formation of ideas, human behavior, social institutions, or social processes
- use historical facts to provide context for understanding information
- apply discipline-specific methods to retrieve information
- apply discipline-specific methods to reconstruct the historical past
- interpret information to analyze historical events
- use social sciences concepts to analyze human behavior
- discuss social institutions from a historical or social sciences perspective
- identify social processes in everyday life
9. Employ concepts and methods of the natural and physical sciences to make informed judgments
- describe fundamental concepts in a field of science
- explain and demonstrate the process of scientific inquiry
- discuss the role of science and its impact on the individual, society and the environment
10. Apply aesthetic and intellectual criteria in the evaluation or creation of works in the humanities or the arts
- analyze and evaluate literary works
- analyze and evaluate works of art
- perform or create artistic works