When i write little core curriculum, i mean a curriculum that takes up less than a third of your time at the university/college. Also, please feel free to add schools that allow you to take classes outside a double major (aka the flexibility of a school’s requirements)
In many cases, if you have majors in different general areas (e.g. one science and one social studies), you may find that they cover more of the general education requirements automatically compared to one major.
The number of colleges whose general education requirements make up one third or less of the course work needed to graduate is likely quite large.
I’m not an expert and haven’t looked a that many, but I thought the distribution requirements at Williams looked pretty lax compared to others I have seen. S noticed that he could get away with no more foreign language, which bumped them up a few notches in his mind!
Rice has no core (aside from a freshman writing requirement) and very flexible distribution requirements. That curricular flexibility is evidenced in the fact that around 40% of students double major, many in quite disparate disciplines.
Amherst College
Bennington College
Brown University Evergreen State College
Hamilton College
New College of Florida
Smith College
Wake Forest College of Wake Forest University
Minimal Requirements
Beloit College
Eugene Lang College of The New School
Grinnell College
Sarah Lawrence College
Vassar College
University of Rochester
Marlboro College
Kalamazoo College requires only foreign language and two writing seminars plus a capstone or interdisciplinary project . It revised its curriculum within the last few years, so perhaps that is why it does not appear on some lists of open/flexible curriculum.
Not a university but Ohio University’s Honors Tutorial College has no core curriculum. You do have a major but you kind of design your program. You can take grad level courses if approved and have a lot more flexibility in your curriculum.
Northeastern University, Boston. (A LOT of combined majors - which removes the crossover courses/requirements in normal double major programs). Also, the core is not a set of required courses but competencies so there is so much flexibility in choosing courses in your major or that interest you to meet the competencies.
Odd that Hamilton and Smith are in the “fully open” category but Grinnell is in the “minimal requirements” category. All three have a limitation the number of courses in one department that can be applied to the degree, which is their main requirement that enforces breadth.
Nice list guys. I was at NYU earlier this summer and I heard that it’s easy for students to double major with a minor or to even triple major (I’m not sure if this meant going over 4 years at NYU). And I read on Union’s curriculum web page that it’s easy to triple major – so I guess the new question is where can we triple major with ‘ease’ and knock off some core requirements easily?