About Columbia College
Columbia College is a relatively small, coeducational, residential
college situated in a large and complex university. These circumstances
work to the advantage of our students, who often enjoy the individual,
personal attention that only a small college can provide and, at
the same time, attend classes that offer an impressive array of
intellectual challenges and rewards.
Columbia College has had the best general education curriculum
in the country for more than half a century. This common curriculum
has created and sustained a community of discourse shared by the
current student body with generations of alumni. As with other great
traditions, however, this living discourse has not been static,
but has evolved and developed across the years. And it will continue
to do so.
The vitality of any tradition depends upon its constant renewal,
and for this reason, among others, Columbia Colleges general
education is conducted in small seminars. Although many excellent
colleges offer one or two semesters of general education courses,
such courses tend to be taught as large lectures in large halls
filled with students taking notes. At Columbia College, students
spend a substantial part of their first years in small classes,
reading and discussing primary works of literature, philosophy,
history, science, and social and political theory, and studying
fine arts and music. Through discussion and debate, through writing,
and through direct interaction between instructor and student, our
core curriculum helps improve each students ability to engage
in the kinds of analytic, discursive, and imaginative thinking that
will prove indispensable in both subsequent education and later
life.
As a small college in a large research institution, Columbia College
also offers a large array of academic programs taught by faculty
working at the frontiers of their disciplines. Students can choose
from among more than fifty majors, over thirty concentrations, and
hundreds of electives, which range widely over the arts, humanities,
natural sciences, and social sciences.
Besides these curricular resources, there are also extensive cultural,
athletic, and recreational resources available to students at Columbia.
Many opportunities also exist for students to participate in outreach
programs that assist less fortunate members of our society.
Although virtually all of our first-year students live in residence
halls, student life at Columbia extends beyond classrooms and campus
experiences. The intensity, excitement, cultural richness, and social
variety of urban New York beckons to all of you. The spirit of Columbia
College finds its full and deep expression in the combination of
our demanding curriculum, our diverse and talented student body,
and our challenging location in a great university and a great city.
-Austin E. Quigley,
Dean, Columbia College
For more information see the About Columbia
College Web site.
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