American Institutions (AI) American Cultures (AC)

<p>Anyone know where I can find a list of courses at UCB that fulfill these requirements, should be an easy task, but I can't seem to figure out which classes fulfill these areas. Also, the websites at Cal states that assist.org has this info (and maybe I have already fulfilled these requirements via my california community college) but I cannot find the info on assist.org when I follow they link they provide. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer to me. Go bears!</p>

<p>On my IGETC paper from my CC it has a list of courses that satisfy the American Cultures requirement. The government and history requirements are vague. I took polisci and history in CC so I think that covers it, but I’ll be sure to ask at Calso.</p>

<p>Here is the link for UCB American Cultures Courses:
[Approved</a> AC Courses at Berkeley | UC Berkeley Academic Senate](<a href=“http://academic-senate.berkeley.edu/committees/amcult/approved-ac-courses-berkeley]Approved”>Approved AC Courses at Berkeley | Academic Senate)
This link provides all the approved courses from other schools, search your community college to see if any were available.
[Approved</a> AC Courses at Other Colleges | UC Berkeley Academic Senate](<a href=“http://academic-senate.berkeley.edu/committees/amcult/approved-ac-courses-other-colleges]Approved”>Approved AC Courses at Other Colleges | Academic Senate)</p>

<p>thanks dudes! hey, @moon9kittie thank you for the links! that’s right, i did see that list and my college is not even on there. duh. that really is a drag, i hope i don’t need to take MORE lame classes. heh</p>

<p>oh, and classes over 100. are those Upper division classes? since you dudes are smart, you will know. that was the premise i was working on. not sure why i imagine that it was structured that way.</p>

<p>You’re correct any classes over 100 are upper division. As a transfer you’re still allowed take a lower division AC class if it interests you.</p>

<p>thanks @yellowbusrydah</p>

<p>On [Welcome</a> to ASSIST](<a href=“http://www.assist.org%5DWelcome”>http://www.assist.org) :</p>

<p>Select either your community college or UC Berkeley
Select the school you did not select above
In the “By Major” selector, you should see selections for the list of AH&I and AC fulfilling courses.</p>

<p>Once you are at UC Berkeley, you can identify most AC courses by the AC suffix to the course number, although a few (e.g. History 7A and 7B) do not have that suffix.</p>

<p>@ucbalumnus
cool dude. that was exactly what i needed. of course now that i have found it the truth is revealed “no course articulated” haha. thanks. hope others catch this thread and can figure it out too.</p>

<p>it does look like my regular american history classes should cover the “institutions” requirement though. according to assist.org. that would be good news. maybe i can snag the “cultures” course this summer. hope so.
those are my least favorite classes. all that babble about nothing.</p>

<p>you guys are all so great. thanks for your help!</p>

<p>by the way, did you guys notice at the end of the online counseling session the list of the most common questions?
number one was: Did UCB make a mistake and admit me by accident?!</p>

<p>I laughed so hard at that.</p>

<p>Okay, if you check the “Schedule Builder” on your list of things to do, they do actually list all the AC classes. Just didn’t notice it because it was right in front of my nose. Thanks for the tip about AC, obvious, but I needed a tap on the shoulder. </p>

<p><a href=“https://schedulebuilder.berkeley.edu/explore/ac/FL/2012[/url]”>https://schedulebuilder.berkeley.edu/explore/ac/FL/2012&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;