<p>Hi guys. I'd really appreciate it if you could list off some colleges with no core curriculums (I already know about the obvious ones). Thank you very much!</p>
<p>BROWN! University of Rochester has only English. I hear Vassar doesn't require many core courses either.</p>
<p>amherst...........</p>
<p>vassar doesn't have any either</p>
<p>Oberlin has no core curriculum, though there are divisional distribution requirements.</p>
<p>oberlin has no core curriculum but they do have GE</p>
<p>harryp, core curriculum and distribution requirements are two different things. Core meaning everyone takes the same courses, distibution requirements meaning students choose a specific number of courses from a loose categories, like science or humanities. Very few colleges have core curricula. Chicago and Columbia are examples. Quite a few have distribution reqirements.</p>
<p>Ones that have neither meaning take what ever you want whenever you want are Brown and Amherst. I'm sure there are others.</p>
<p>Brown has NO core curriculum and NO distribution requirements. Rochester only requires English.</p>
<p>Hmmm...so you should clarify what you mean. I assumed no distribution and no core curriculum.</p>
<p>The only thing that is required at Amherst is a first year seminar. There are 20 choices in about every field: math, drugs, the Renaissance, war, black history, physics...etc. That's it. You can take anything or everything that you want. Although your advisor may urge you to take a class in a different field, you can do whatever you want.</p>
<p>Rice has a really limited core curriculum, I think it is only 3 classes...one in science/math related area, one in humanities, and one in...not positive, but its easy to get these out of the way and then youre open to take whatever you want.</p>
<p>Thanks guys. Yeah, anything with very limited distribution requirements and core classes.</p>
<p>pitzer has no core curriculum</p>