<p>So I need to take some Gen Eds. is it true that some courses satisfy both (Non)Western/Humanities requirements? Or (Non)Western/Social Sciences? Because that would be awesome.</p>
<p>Anyway, is there an easy way for me to list all courses that satisfy a certain criteria? Thanks.</p>
<p>Edit: Oops, sorry, found it. Still wondering if I can kill my (Non)Western/Humanities requirement with 1 stone.</p>
<p>A course could qualify for more than one category, but you could only use it for it for one. these courses are just more flexible, thats all- they don’t reduce the amount of gen eds you have to take</p>
<p>^That’s not correct. A given course can fulfill from one to three gen ed requirements depending on the course taken. Go here to see the categories that a particular course will fulfill. Many are “two-fer” and some are “three-fer” courses. Here’s the link to the Gen Eds: [Course</a> Information Suite, Course Catalog, Class Schedule, Programs of Study, General Education Requirements, GenEd](<a href=“Course Explorer”>Course Explorer). Clicking on the Humanities link, for example, and scrolling down to ANTH 268 will show that course fulfills the Advanced Composition Requirement, the Western Civ requirement as well as 3 hours of the Humanities requirements. It is counted towards fulfilling all three.</p>
<p>They can fulfill requirements for multiple categories, but you still have to have the full 18 hours made up somewhere. There is no way to reduce that number.</p>
<p>For the university gen ed requirements, one course can count toward more than one requirement with the result that you can take fewer courses to meet the total than the total number of hours indicated. For example, it is possible to take only 12 hours of courses and meet the 6 hour humanities, 6 hour social studies, and 6 hours of western and non-western civilization requirements. The university requirement does not require you to actually have 18 hours in that group.</p>
<p>However, you also need to meet the gen ed requirements of your college and those are expressed in total number of hours. For example, engineering has an 18 hour reqiurement. That means actually having 18 hours. Courses you take that meet the university gen ed requirments will generally also count toward the college gen ed requirement.</p>