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Academics Students Columbia College
Students
Academics - A Letter from the Dean
Academic Calendar
Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts
Core Curriculum
Committee on the Core
Literature Humanities
Literature Humanities Syllabus
Contemporary Civilization
Contemporary Civilization Syllabus
Art Humanities
Music Humanities
Foreign Language Requirement
University Writing
Major Cultures
Physical Education
Science Requirement
Frontiers of Science
Frontiers of Science Syllabus
Frontiers of Science Fellowship
Course Search
Departments of Instruction
Plagiarism and Acknowledgement of Sources
Academic Concerns, Complaints, and Grievances
Programs of Study
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Columbia College Bulletin
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The Core Curriculum

The Core Curriculum is the cornerstone of a Columbia education. Central to the intellectual mission of the Core is the goal of providing all Columbia students, regardless of their major or concentration, with wide-ranging perspectives on significant ideas and achievements in literature, philosophy, history, music, art, and science.

Contemporary Civilization began in 1919 as a course on War and Peace Issues, and the creation of Literature Humanities followed in 1937. By 1947 Art Humani-ties and Music Humanities had been added, and a new course in Asian Humanities was introduced. Major cultures joined the Core in 1990 and Frontiers of Science in 2004. Though celebrated for their content, these courses are equally important for their small class format. Taught in seminars limited to approximately twenty-two students, these courses ensure that education at Columbia begins with an emphasis on active intellectual engagement. The small size of most Core Curriculum classes provides students with the opportunity to develop intellectual relationships with faculty early on in their College career and to participate with them in a shared process of intellectual inquiry. In the Core Curriculum the pur-suit of better questions is every bit as important as the pursuit of better answers.

The skills and habits honed by the Core—observation, analysis, argument, imaginative comparison, respect for ideas, nuances, and differences—provide a rigorous preparation for life as an intelligent citizen in today’s complex and changing world.

The Core Classes

The following required courses constitute the Columbia College Core Curriculum. They include general education requirements in major disciplines:

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