<p>Hi, I want to know whether these classes will be counted for BOTH the requirements or do we have to take a separate class? For instance (in my case):</p>
<p>C1 / C2 (two 5 credit courses) - 80A & 80B
TA (one 5 credit course) - 80A or 80B</p>
<p>I need to take both 80A and 80B anyway, so do I have to take another class in the TA criteria?</p>
<p>Thanks in advance for answering</p>
<p>Hopefully this helps but this is what i found:</p>
<p>[4</a>. General Education](<a href=“http://planning.ucsc.edu/irps/stratpln/wasc94/a/sec4.htm]4”>http://planning.ucsc.edu/irps/stratpln/wasc94/a/sec4.htm)</p>
<p>Courses Meeting More Than One Requirement</p>
<p>Some courses can meet more than one general education requirement. A document authored by CEP entitled “Description and Rationale of New General Education Requirements, Attachment II” (1984) states:</p>
<p>Individual courses may have multiple breadth codes… In general, faculty are urged to (re)design courses, especially in the lower division, to meet multiple requirements whenever possible.</p>
<p>Two rules govern which courses can satisfy two or more requirements: (a) no course can satisfy both the composition and writing requirements (ensuring that students have at least two quarters of writing instruction); and (b) other requirements may be combined when there is no reason why they are incompatible (e.g., an introduction to the discipline course cannot also be classified as a topical course). Breadth is assured by the “introduction to the discipline” courses (involving six different boards) and the three topical courses (each from a different division). The arts, ethnic/third world, quantitative, and writing-intensive requirements can be combined with other general education objectives when appropriate. Although there are fourteen requirements, it was not intended that students necessarily take fourteen separate courses.</p>
<p>alright, cool, this helps a lot though it’s not super clear</p>
<p>My suggestion is to talk to an advisor. They should be able to answer your questions!</p>