<p>Im not sure if there is even a class like this but lets say that you take a class that fulfills both the Environment theme and the Global Perspectives theme. Do you choose which one you want or is it a "two birds one stone" type deal. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.</p>
<p>future…As far as I know, there aren’t any courses which count for two different themes simultaneously. There are courses which can fulfill a core, a theme, and a writing intensive requirement (or some combination thereof) simultaneously, and those are spelled out in the LE requirements links from the OneStop website. Here’s a link to those course listings.</p>
<p>[Fall</a> 2010 liberal education requirements](<a href=“http://onestop.umn.edu/degree_planning/lib_eds/fall_2010_requirements/index.html]Fall”>Liberal education requirements | Twin Cities One Stop Student Services)</p>
<p>I guess it’s possible that the same course might be listed under more than one theme but I didn’t thoroughly scrub each list. I did not see any course listed with more than one theme on the individual theme pages though.</p>
<p>You can knock out two requirements with one course, but I haven’t heard of any courses that cover two themes.</p>
<p>Well there is 3 aspects of a course:</p>
<p>CORE - THEME - WRITING</p>
<p>it either fulfills a Core and/or Theme, and may fulfill a writing.
so you can have:</p>
<p>CORE
CORE- THEME
CORE -THEME - WRITING
CORE- WRITING
THEME
THEME - WRITING
WRITING</p>
<p>Environment and Global Perspectives are both themes so you can’t fulfill both, and there aren’t courses like that.
Only 1 core, 1 theme, or 1 writing credit can be present but you can have them together with each other</p>
<p>Maybe im not understanding what your asking, but there are classes that can fulfill two LE requirements simultaneously. Go to onestop/grad planner/ set it up for what you want and use the search tool to find classes that fulfill two LE requirements.</p>
<p>edit- some classes are 2000 and higher level courses, I would recommend searching for 1000 level courses to fulfill LE requirements as you don’t want them to drag down your main studies.</p>