School of General Studies

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General Studies
GS-Shield.gif
Established 1947
President {{{President}}}
Dean Peter Awn
Degrees BA, BS, Postbac Certificate in Premedical Sciences
Enrollment 1,260 Undergraduate, 433 Postbac students (2006)
Website www.gs.columbia.edu

The School of General Studies, or GS is a degree-granting college of Columbia University. It confers Bachelor of Art and Bachelor of Science degrees in over forty different majors. In addition to its undergraduate program, GS also offers a joint program with List College of the Jewish Theological Seminary as well as a postbaccalaureate premedical program. The average age of GS students is 27.[1]

Admissions

Although the School of General Studies is notoriously tight-lipped about its admission criteria and the statistics on admitted students, some information is available. Most GS students are transfer students, as 78% of the admitted class in 2006 transferred some college credit.[2] For transfer students, a minimum college GPA of 3.00 is required.[3] GS also requires standardized test scores for entry. The school will use scores from the SAT, ACT, or the school's own General Studies Admissions Exam. [4] A list of admissions requirements and procedures is available from the General Studies website

The School tends to admit nearly 50% of applicants.[5] The profile of the applicant pool or the admitted pool is unknown.

Additional statistics on application, admission, and matriculation are available at the website of the Office of Planning and Institutional Research. [1]

Academics

GS students must complete a total of 124 credits to graduate. Up to 60 of these credits may be transferred from another institution; at least 64 credits must be completed at Columbia University.[6] GS students must complete the core requirements and a major. GS students may attend full-time or part-time, while CC students are expected to attend full-time (part-time study is accepted under special circumstances.)

Core Requirements

The following table lists the core requirements for GS and CC:

GS[7] CC[8]
Writing[9] University Writing University Writing
Literature 2 Literature Courses OR Literature Humanities Literature Humanities
Foreign Language 4th Semester of a Language OR exemption by university exam 4th Semester of a Language OR exemption by university exam
Art Art Humanities, Asian Humanities (Art) or exemption by similar course taken at another institution Art Humanities
Music Music Humanities or Asian Humanities (Music) or exemption by similar course taken at another institution Music Humanities
Humanities/Social Science 2 courses each in Humanities and Social Science (students have the option to take Contemporary Civilization, which satisfies the Social Science requirement. Contemporary Civilization
Quantitative Reasoning Exemption by exam: 600 on Math section of SAT OR any mathematics, statistics, economics, or computer science course, OR Frontiers of Science, which satisfies both a Science and the Quantitative requirements Covered under Science requirement
Physical Education None Swim test, 2 courses
Science 3 science courses, one of which can be Frontiers of Science Frontiers of Science and 2 additional science courses
Cultural Diversity 1 course that focuses on a culture, society, literature, or language of a nation or region that, as a general principle, is located outside the United States, Canada, or Europe. 2 courses from the Major Cultures Approved Courses List

Major Requirements

Major requirements are determined departmentally. These are generally the same for both GS and CC.

Financial Aid

GS offers scholarships for both newly accepted and continuing students. These scholarships are merit- rather than need-based, and the amounts awarded range from $500 to $18,000.

A common complaint made by GS students is that the financial aid amounts and options offered by GS are smaller than those offered to CC/SEAS students. In the absence of need-based institutional aid, many GS students rely on a combination of loans, external grants, and personal funds. In 2006 the University announced financial aid reforms for CC and SEAS students whose parents earn less than $50,000 annually.

GS does not offer parity with the packages offered to CC/SEAS students. This is because the scholarship system at GS is independent of the financial aid system for CC/SEAS and funding is sourced from a separate GS-only pool. GS has made some recent efforts to address the issue, both through campaigns to increase the endowment and by increasing its scholarship offerings by 10 percent (in 2006.)

History

The University Extension program was reorganized and renamed the School of General Studies in 1947, in part to address the influx of GIs returning from World War II. It became Columbia's third official undergraduate school. It is sometimes claimed that Barnard College is Columbia's third undergraduate school, and GS is its fourth; however Barnard is officially only affiliated with Columbia University, while GS, its deans, and students are formally integrated into the university proper, along with Columbia College and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

GS originally maintained its own faculty, classes, and programs. In 1967 the University first decided (over the objection of the Columbia College Faculty) to allow GS to grant the B.A. degree in addition to the B.S. In the 1980s it was separated from the Division of Continuing Education. In 1990, the CC, GS, and GSAS faculties were merged into the Faculty of Arts & Sciences.

Housing

General Studies students are not eligible for the CC/SEAS Room Selection process. However, many GS students receive housing through University Apartment Housing.

Myths

  • GS is night school.
GS students attend the same classes as students in other colleges at the university. Columbia offers some classes at night, which are available to all students.
  • GS is an extension program.
GS is a degree-granting college. Students are expected to pursue a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree. The separate School of Continuing Education offers individual courses on non-degree basis.
  • GS is a back door to CC.
  • GS and CC are separate administrative units. It is not possible to go from GS to CC; in some cases, students can go from CC to GS.

Relationship to Columbia College

The School of General Studies is loosely defined as a school for 'non-traditional students.' Non-traditional in GS terms seems to refer to anybody who has had a gap of one year or more in their undergraduate studies.[10] By inference, Columbia College is for 'traditional students' who matriculate directly from high school and have not had a gap of more than one year in their undergraduate studies. On this basis, students interested are applying to study at Columbia University are tracked to an 'appropriate' school. These admissions criteria favor tracking older students into the School of General Studies and is de facto if not de jure age discrimination.

Part of the tension between Columbia College and General Studies stems from the University's 1967 decision (over the objection of the Columbia College Faculty) to allow GS to grant the A.B. degree in addition to the B.S., undermining one of the few priveleges Columbia College had within a University that was often hostile to its very existence. As a result, even though GS and CC students are academically indistinguishable- they both receive instruction in the liberal arts and sciences from the Columbia Faculty of Arts and Sciences and receive the Bachelor of Arts degree from Columbia University- GS is treated as a lesser school, possibly at the instigiation of a still resentful College.

While the University's decision eliminated the College's exclusive prerogative to grant the A.B. degree, the University most likely viewed it as yet another revenue stream. It should be noted that for a large part of it's history, the University administration has paid scant attention to the College. Then-dean of the College David Truman reportedly broke into tears when he learned of the Trustees' decision.

At the time each of schools had a faculty independent of the other, with professors able to hold joint-appointments between multiple faculties. There was likely a certain sense of the College faculty's privilege to grant the A.B. being encroached on. The independent faculties of the schools have since been integrated into a single Faculty of Arts and Science.

With the integration of the faculties, it becomes harder to justify the segregation of GS within the University. GS admissions statistics are not reported in conjunction with CC/SEAS statistics- though this is related both to GS's much later decision dates, and the opacity of it's admissions process. GS releases few statistics about its incoming class, leading to speculation that GS lets in students with subpar statistics, which the University then 'hides.' This is also the grounds for accusations that GS is a "back door" to a Columbia undergraduate education.

Additionally GS students deal with a dearth of financial aid funding. Because GS is operated separately from the joint administration of CC and SEAS, it is not covered in the plan to eliminate student loans for CC and SEAS students with family incomes below $50,000, an initiative applicable only to the financial aid office under CC/SEAS's Division of Student Affairs.

The somewhat arbitrary delineations between the College and GS have grown as a result of attempts to reconcile the overlap between the schools while justifying the disparate standing of the schools within the University. The wide range of constituents forming the GS student body, from professionals or drop outs returning to school for a degree, to students who took 2 years off before attending college, to 'traditional' age students enrolled in the Joint Degree Program with List College at JTS, to post-bac pre-med students, makes it hard to say just what identity GS students have that makes them so different from their fellow students in the College.

Notes

Further reading

External links

Columbia University Schools
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Affiliated Institutions
BarnardJewish Theological SeminaryTeachers CollegeUnion Theological Seminary
Defunct Schools
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