Apr 17, 2025  
2025-2026 University Catalog 
    
2025-2026 University Catalog

General Education Requirements



General Education profoundly influences undergraduates by providing the breadth of knowledge necessary for meaningful work, lifelong learning, socially responsible citizenship, and intellectual development. This 43-unit program, 34 units of lower division GE, and 9 units of upper division Explorations, which comprises over one third of an undergraduate’s course of study, places specialized disciplines into a wider world, enabling students to integrate knowledge and to make connections among fields of inquiry.

The General Education program at SDSU prepares students to succeed in an increasingly complex and rapidly changing world. Students will live and work in the context of globalization, scientific and technological innovation, cross-cultural encounters, environmental challenges, and unforeseen shifts in economic and political power. Through this program, students will acquire knowledge of human cultures and the physical and natural world that will enable them to engage significant questions, both contemporary and enduring.

To put their breadth of knowledge to work, students gain intellectual and practical skills such as inquiry and analysis, creative and critical thinking, written and oral communication, scientific and quantitative literacy, and technological-information proficiencies. Students practice these skills in progressively challenging venues, mastering learning outcomes from a series of courses drawn from the following sections: Area 1, English Communication; Area 2, Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning; Area 3, Arts and Humanities, Area 4, Social and Behavioral Sciences; Area 5, Physical and Biological Sciences, Area 6, Ethnic Studies; and Explorations of Human Experience. In order to acquire the skills required for advanced coursework within and across disciplines, students should complete these sections sequentially.

The General Education program at San Diego State University is evolving. A standing committee of faculty and students reviews the program continually and encourages the development of new courses, concepts, and learning experiences.

Institutional Learning Outcomes

In 2020, San Diego State University established seven “Institutional Learning Outcomes” (ILOs) to guide and connect our broad educational mission through our diverse degree offerings. Many of these ILOs are aligned with the four broader Core Competencies for educational institutions as established by our regional accreditor, the Western Association of Schools and Colleges Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC):

  1. Demonstrate expertise in integrating ideas, methods, theories, and practices within and across academic/disciplinary areas of study. (Disciplinary/Interdisciplinary Knowledge)
  2. Seek, analyze, contextualize, and incorporate information to expressly enrich understanding of the world. (WSCUC Information Literacy)
  3. Develop the ability to sustain curiosity and to think critically, creatively, and independently. (WSCUC Critical Thinking)
  4. Develop skills to collaborate effectively and ethically as leaders and team members. (WSCUC Oral and Written Communication)
  5. Communicate effectively within and across academic, professional, and social contexts. (WSCUC Oral and Written Communication)
  6. Use deductive reasoning and statistical methods to gather, interpret, and evaluate data critically, in order to assess the reasonableness of solutions to scientific, civic, and personal challenges. (WSCUC Quantitative Reasoning)
  7. Demonstrate the ability to enact positive social change through the acquisition of knowledge, sensibilities, and skills associated with anti-racism, social justice, critical consciousness, leadership, ethnic identity, diversity, equity, inclusion, and sustainability using local, global, and/or ethical perspectives that provide direct service to society also known as liberatory outcomes.

While situated within the General Education section of the catalog, these ILOs transcend General Education and serve to inform the design and content of course and degree offerings across the broader University.

General Education

General Education, which includes the 9 units of upper division Explorations courses,  introduce students to the basic concepts, theories, and approaches offered by disciplinary and interdisciplinary areas of study. They provide the foundation to understand and approach problems in the academy, and in local and global real-world environments. Consistent with class size and learning goals, they cultivate skills in reading, writing, communication, computation, information-gathering, and use of technology. Where appropriate, courses intended as preparation for a major may also be designated as lower division general education courses.

Area 1. English Communication

Courses in the English Communication area are essential skills that underlie all university education. Focusing particularly on argument, courses in this area of General Education help students understand the general function of writing, speaking, visual texts, and thinking within the context of the university at large, rather than within specific disciplines. In addition to featuring the basic rules and conventions governing composition and presentation, English Communication courses establish intellectual frameworks and analytical tools that help students explore, construct, critique, and integrate sophisticated texts.

Goals in English Communication:

  • Goal 1: Craft well-reasoned arguments for specific audiences.
  • Goal 2: Analyze a variety of texts commonly encountered in the academic setting.
  • Goal 3: Situate discourse within social, generic, cultural, and historic contexts.
  • Goal 4: Assess the relative strengths of arguments and supporting evidence.

Area 2. Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning

Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative reasoning refers to a range of academic capacities that includes learning from data, communicating quantitatively, analyzing evidence and assertions, and employing quantitative intuition. While quantitative reasoning is essential to sciences, other disciplines require the ability to use and comprehend quantitative language. To do this, students require the ability to analyze and interpret data in both scientific and social contexts. By possessing this set of mathematical and problem solving skills, students will be able to engage effectively in quantitative situations arising in life and work.

Goals for GE Courses in Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning

  • Goal 1: Apply appropriate computational skills and use basic mathematical concepts to analyze problems in natural and social sciences.
  • Goal 2: Use methods of quantitative reasoning to solve and communicate answers to real-world problems.

Area 3. Arts and Humanities

The Humanities and Arts encompass works of the imagination, such as art, literature, film, drama, dance, and music, and related scholarship. Students better understand human problems, responsibilities, and possibilities in changing historical contexts and diverse cultures, and in relation to the natural environment. Students acquire new languages and familiarize themselves with related cultures. They gain the ability to recognize and assess various aesthetic principles, belief systems, and constructions of identity. Students acquire capacities for reflection, critique, communication, cultural understanding, creativity, and problem solving in an increasingly globalized world.

Goals for GE Courses in the Humanities and Fine Arts

  • Goal 1: Analyze written, visual, or performed texts in the humanities and fine arts with sensitivity to their diverse cultural contexts and historical moments.
  • Goal 2: Develop a familiarity with various aesthetic and other value systems and the ways they are communicated across time and cultures.
  • Goal 3: Argue from multiple perspectives about issues in the humanities that have personal and global relevance.
  • Goal 4: Demonstrate the ability to approach complex problems and ask complex questions drawing upon knowledge of the humanities.

Area 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

The Social and Behavioral Sciences focus on human behavior, cognition, and organization from anthropological, economic, geographic, historical, linguistic, political, psychological and sociological perspectives. Students gain an understanding of society and culture, as well as individual and social interaction processes. Disciplines within the Social and Behavioral Sciences employ the scientific method and utilize both quantitative and qualitative techniques to analyze the diversity and complexity of human experience. Through interdisciplinary learning, students explore the relationships between human societies and the physical environment.

Goals for GE Courses in the Social and Behavioral Sciences

  • Goal 1: Explore and recognize basic terms, concepts, and domains of the social and behavioral sciences.
  • Goal 2: Comprehend diverse theories and methods of the social and behavioral sciences.
  • Goal 3: Identify human behavioral patterns across space and time and discuss their interrelatedness and distinctiveness.
  • Goal 4: Enhance understanding of the social world through the application of conceptual frameworks from the social and behavioral sciences to first-hand engagement with contemporary issues.

Area 5. Physical and Biological Sciences

Physical and Biological Sciences use the scientific process to study nature and represent an approach to the study of the universe and its natural laws and phenomena. Students achieve basic scientific literacy and thereby understand the scientific process including the value of observation, hypothesis testing, and experiments in the advance of science. Thus students require a general understanding of fundamental concepts and knowledge accumulated by the natural sciences. From that understanding, students develop an ability to reason about and follow new developments in the Physical and Biological sciences, and to think in a scientifically informed manner about social and political issues that involve science and technology.

Goals for GE Courses in the Physical and Biological Sciences

  • Goal 1: Explain basic concepts and theories of the Physical and Biological sciences.
  • Goal 2: Use logic and scientific methods to analyze the natural world and solve problems.
  • Goal 3: Argue from multiple perspectives about issues in Physical and Biological science that have personal and global relevance.
  • Goal 4: Use technology in laboratory and field situations to connect concepts and theories with real-world phenomena.

Special Provision for Majors in the Sciences and Related Fields

Some majors require or recommend coursework in astronomy, biology, chemistry, geological sciences, or physics in preparation for the major. Students who have declared one of these majors may substitute those courses for courses listed under either Physical or Biological Sciences in Area 5. Physical or Biological Sciences (as appropriate).

Area 6. Ethnic Studies

More than half a century ago, in the midst of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, the field of ethnic studies emerged, seeking to advance the interdisciplinary study of race, ethnicity, and indigeneity, while emphasizing the experiences, contributions, histories, and perspectives of people of color in the United States and beyond. In the hopes of disrupting centuries of historical marginalization, departments of Africana, American Indian, Chicana/o/x, and Asian American studies emerged at universities across the country-including SDSU.
Now, as we enter the third decade of the twenty-first century, the ongoing challenges that racism, marginalization, inequality, and discrimination pose could not be more obvious, nor more urgent. In response, the California legislature passed AB 1460, which made ethnic studies a graduation requirement at the CSU beginning with the 2021-2022 academic year. AB 1460 states that, at minimum, three (3) units of ethnic studies shall be offered at the CSU and recognizes the value, importance, and promise of ethnic studies as an essential part of a student’s education, providing skills and knowledge that will contribute to a liberatory, democratic, and pluralistic American future.

SDSU strongly believes that ethnic studies is a vital component of the undergraduate experience. At SDSU, we have innovated two ethnic studies requirements-unusual in higher education. One is a general education requirement, which meets the CSU Executive Order to create a distinct GE category (Area 6), and the other is a general graduation requirement created by SDSU Senate resolution (see Section X of this page). Required ethnic studies courses, as per AB 1460 and CSU Executive Order 1100, are taught only within designated ethnic studies programs. At SDSU, these are the Departments of Africana Studies, American Indian Studies, and Chicana and Chicano Studies, and in the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies. Courses that satisfy Area 6 and Section X are listed on this page.  Students must take one class in Area 6, that requirement cannot be waived or substituted. However, classes taken to satisfy GE Area 6 can double count to also satisfy the Section X requirement.

Goals for GE Courses in Ethnic Studies

  • Goal 1: Analyze and articulate concepts such as race and racism, racialization, ethnicity, equity, ethno-centrism, eurocentrism, white supremacy, self-determination, liberation, decolonization, sovereignty, imperialism, settler colonialism, and anti-racism as analyzed in any one or more of the following: Native American Studies, African American Studies, Asian American Studies, and Latina and Latino American Studies.
  • Goal 2: Apply theory and knowledge produced by Native American, African American, Asian American, and/or Latina and Latino American communities to describe the critical events, histories, cultures, intellectual traditions, contributions, lived-experiences and social struggles of those groups with a particular emphasis on agency and group-affirmation.
  • Goal 3: Critically analyze the intersection of race and racism as they relate to class, gender, sexuality, religion, spirituality, national origin, immigration status, ability, tribal citizenship, sovereignty, language, and/or age in Native American, African American, Asian American, and/or Latina and Latino American communities.
  • Goal 4: Critically review how struggle, resistance, racial and social justice, solidarity, and liberation, as experienced and enacted by Native Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans and/or Latina and Latino Americans are relevant to current and structural issues such as communal, national, international, and transnational politics as, for example, in immigration, reparations, settler-colonialism, multiculturalism, language policies.
  • Goal 5: Describe and actively engage with anti-racist and anti-colonial issues and the practices and movements in Native American, African American, Asian American and/or Latina and Latino communities and a just and equitable society.

Explorations of Human Experience

Explorations of Human Experience courses are upper division general education courses which allow concentrated or thematic study. In Explorations of Human Experience, there are three areas of study - Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning, Arts and Humanities, and Social and Behavioral Sciences. Among these areas are courses designated as cultural diversity courses. Explorations of Human Experience courses take the goals and skills of lower division general education. These courses may find expression in one or more of the following pedagogical elements: greater interdisciplinary, more complex and in-depth theory, deeper investigation of local problems, and wider awareness of global challenges. More extensive reading, written analysis involving complex comparisons, well-developed arguments, considerable bibliography, and use of technology are appropriate in many Explorations of Human Experience courses. Courses narrowly centered within one aspect of a discipline are more suited to major study than general education, which encourages students to relate their learning across the range of their educational experience. Explorations of Human Experience courses are upper division and cannot be used to fulfill this requirement if taken before students reach junior standing (passing 60 units).

Cultural Diversity

One Explorations course in areas Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning/Physical and Biological Sciences, Arts and Humanities, or Social and Behavioral Sciences must be a course in cultural diversity, as indicated by an asterisk (*). Cultural diversity courses focus on the theoretical and practical factors of age, class, disability, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, immigration, nation, race, religion, sexuality, socioeconomic status, and other significant markers of social identity. Courses meeting this requirement examine the complexity of diversity through an analysis of differential inequities, oppression, power, and privilege. Cultural diversity courses focus on non-dominant views and perspectives.

Goals for GE Courses Meeting the Diversity Requirement

  • Goal 1: Enhance understanding of the diverse efforts and strategies used by groups to transform and/or dismantle structures of oppression.
  • Goal 2: Foster reflection and appreciation of non-dominant perspectives, their contribution to society and culture, and models for their inclusion.
  • Goal 3: Analyze the intersection of the categories of various dimensions of difference as they affect cultural groups’ members’ lived realities and/or as they are embodied in personal and collective identities.
  • Goal 4: Formulate informed views on the mechanisms for maintaining existing power structures and their impact on all sectors of society.

Requirements and Limitations

Students must complete all General Education requirements in all areas including Cultural Diversity for a total of 43 units. Students should not register for upper division GE courses until the semester in which they complete 60 units, as students must be junior-level (60 units) or higher to satisfy the Explorations of Human Experience requirement. Only those courses listed in the General Education areas may be used to satisfy General Education requirements.

Within these 43 units, the following limitations apply:

  1. Explorations of Human Experience courses shall not be taken sooner than the semester in which the student passes 60 units.
  2. Credit/No Credit grades cannot be used in Area 1, English Communication or Area 2, Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning.
  3. Courses numbered 296, 299, 496, 499, 500-level and above cannot be used in General Education.

Transfer Students - Additional Information

Students in the following four categories only need to complete Explorations of Human Experience to satisfy their General Education requirements:

  1. Students who transferred from a California community college and have completed the Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum (IGETC)
  2. Students who transferred from a California community college and are certified as having completed the 39 unit lower division CSU General Education pattern
  3. Students who transferred from a California community college and have completed the California General Education Transfer Curriculum (Cal-GETC).
  4. Students who transferred from another California State University campus and have completed all lower division General Education requirements at the CSU campus.
  5. Students who transferred from a University of California campus and have completed all lower division General Education requirements at the UC campus.

Students must provide SDSU with proof of completion, either a GE certification from their previous institution or a statement of completion from a University of California campus.

Students who have completed one or more areas of CSU General Education pattern at a California community college or another CSU campus, some of the SDSU General Education area requirements may also be met. Transfer coursework from a California community college, CSU or UC campus may be used in the appropriate area of the SDSU General Education pattern, even if the student has not completed any General Education area. Students should consult their degree evaluation to determine outstanding requirements..

For students who transferred from a private college in California or from a non-California college, the requirements listed below must be met. A transfer course will be used when equivalent to the listed SDSU course.

Second Bachelor’s Degree Students in Nursing - Additional Information

Students seeking a second bachelor’s degree in nursing have satisfied all requirements in Areas 1 to 6 of General Education with their first baccalaureate degree from an institutionally accredited college/university.

First-Year Registration Requirements

All students entering SDSU as first-year students are required to register for a specific sequence of lower division General Education courses in the areas of 1.1A. English Communication, 1B. Critical Thinking, 1C. Oral Communication, and Area 2. Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning. First-year students must begin the required sequences in their first semester and continue in subsequent semesters until they complete the sequences.

Specialized General Education Patterns

Liberal Studies and Engineering majors should refer to the description of their major in the Courses and Curricula section of this catalog for a listing of General Education requirements.

Area 1. English Communication (9 units)

1A. English Composition | 1B. Critical Thinking | 1C. Oral Communication

Area 2. Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning (3 units)

Area 3. Arts and Humanities (6 units)

3A. Arts | 3B. Humanities

Area 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences (6 units)

Area 5. Physical and Biological Sciences (7 units)

5A. Physical Science | 5B. Biological Science | 5C. Laboratory*

*Three semester unit science courses with an embedded laboratory may be used to meet the laboratory requirement as long as the minimum unit value is met for Subject Area 5. Stand-alone laboratories shall be a minimum of 1 semester unit and shall have a prerequisite or corequisite of the associated lecture course.

Area 6. Ethnic Studies (3 units)

Explorations of Human Experience (9 units)

Explorations-Area 2. Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning / Area 5. Physical and Biological Sciences

Explorations-Area 3. Arts and Humanities

Explorations-Area 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

General Education Areas and Courses

Area 1. English Communication (9 units)


You may not use Credit/No Credit grades in this section. A grade of C- (1.7) or better is required. Complete one course from each of the following three sections.

Area 3. Arts and Humanities (6 units)


Complete one course from each of the following sections.

3B. Humanities


Area 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences (6 units)


Complete two courses (6 units). Social and Behavioral Sciences courses in lower division general education and Explorations of Human Experience must be taken from a minimum of two different departments. Courses that also fulfill the American Institutions Requirement are identified below as [AI]. For additional information, refer to section IV of the Graduation Requirements for the Bachelor’s Degree  on American Institutions Requirement.

Area 5. Physical and Biological Sciences (7 units)


Complete one course from each of the following three sections. (For majors in the sciences and related fields refer to the Special Provision for Majors in the Sciences and Related Fields section.)

Engineering majors automatically satisfy the Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning [Area 2] and Physical and Biological Sciences [Area 5] lower division GE area by completion of preparation for the major.

Area 6. Ethnic Studies (3 units)


Explorations of Human Experience


Courses in this area must not be taken sooner than the semester in which students achieve upper division standing (60 units passed). Nine units of upper division General Education courses shall be taken within the California State University (CSU) system.

Complete one course each in areas 2 or 5, 3, and 4 (9 units). One course must be a course in cultural diversity, designated by an *.

Area 2 or 5. Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning or Physical and Biological Sciences


Complete one course.

Engineering majors automatically satisfy the Mathematical Concepts and Quantitative Reasoning / Physical and Biological Sciences explorations GE area by completion of the major.

Area 3. Arts and Humanities


Complete one course.

Area 4. Social and Behavioral Science


Complete one course. Social and Behavioral Sciences courses in the lower division general education area and Explorations of Human Experience must be taken from a minimum of two different departments.

Courses that also fulfill the American Institutions requirement are identified below [AI]. Refer to section IV. American Institutions Requirement.

Engineering majors automatically satisfy the Social and Behavioral Sciences explorations GE area by completion of the major.

Note


Approved General Education mathematics course for majors in Non-STEM, Undeclared, and Interdisciplinary Studies in Three Departments.

° Approved General Education mathematics course for majors in STEM, Undeclared, and Interdisciplinary Studies in Three Departments.

^ Taught in English.

* Cultural diversity course.

Course in other General Education areas that will satisfy ethnic studies requirement created by SDSU Senate resolution.

# Taught bilingually.

X. Ethnic Studies Graduation Requirement


Students must complete a three-unit ethnic studies course. This requirement is separate from cultural diversity. Lower division courses that also fulfill Area 1 English Communication may not be used to satisfy this requirement. Ethnic studies courses are identified throughout the University Catalog with an ES designation. Ethnic studies courses focus on the interdisciplinary and comparative study of ethnicity, race, and racialization. Courses meeting this requirement place strong emphasis on groups whose socio-historical experience of land and labor were critical to the building of the United States: African Americans, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and Native Americans. An analysis of empire, migrations, nation-building, power, and the intersections of class, culture, gender, race, and sexuality are critical components in these courses. For a course to meet the ethnic studies requirement it must be taken from the approved list of courses in Africana Studies, American Indian Studies, the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, Chicana and Chicano Studies, or a cross-listed equivalent. It may also satisfy General Education, American Institutions, preparation for the major, and major, where applicable. Students seeking a second bachelor’s degree in nursing are exempt from this requirement with their first baccalaureate degree received from an institutionally accredited college/university.

Goals for courses meeting the ethnic studies requirement:

Goal 1: Define core concepts that are foundational to the field of ethnic studies to include colonialism, equity, ethnicity and culture, Eurocentrism, indigeneity, race, racialization, racism, and white supremacy.

Goal 2: Examine from an interdisciplinary perspective, the general history, culture, and/or contemporary lived experiences of at least one of four groups to include African Americans, Asian Americans, Chicana/o/xs-Latinxs, and Native Americans.

Goal 3: Explain how African American, Asian American, Chicano/ a/x-Latinxs, or Native American communities use different forms of resistance and cultural affirmation for community engagement and the advancement of anti-racism and decolonization.

Goal 4: Analyze how race and racism intersects with class, ethnicity, gender, legal status, and/or sexuality to shape life chances and social relations.

Goal 5: Engage social and academic practices originating in African American, Asian American, Chicano/a/x-Latinx, or Native American communities to work towards building a more anti-racist, decolonial, equitable, and inclusive society beyond the classroom.

 

Ethnic Studies [ES] Courses:  Course Also Fulfills
AAS 100 - Asian American History Units: 3  

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AAS 101 - Politics, Power, and Asian America Units: 3  

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AAS 103 - Introduction to Filipino American Studies Units: 3   6. Ethnic Studies
AAS 422 - Asian American Experiences Units: 3  
also listed as HIST 422  
6. Ethnic Studies
AAS 460 - Contemporary Issues in Filipino-American Communities Units: 3  
also listed as FILIP 460  
6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 101 - Introduction to Africana Studies: Social and Behavioral Sciences Units: 3  

4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AFRAS 102 - An Afrocentric Response to Generational Trauma Units: 3   

 

AFRAS 170A - Afro-American History to 1865 Units: 3   

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 170B - Afro-American History from 1865 to Present Units: 3  

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 240 - Africana Intellectual Thought Units: 3  

3B. Humanities: History, Languages other than English, Literature, Philosophy, Religious Studies

AFRAS 260 - Africana Literary Study Units: 3  

3B. Humanities: History, Languages other than English, Literature, Philosophy, Religious Studies

AFRAS 327 - Critical Theories in Africana Studies Units: 3  

 —–

AFRAS 331 - The Black Family Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 332 - Black Women: Myth and Reality Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies
AFRAS 350 - Africana Digital Humanities Units: 3  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AFRAS 351 - Black Religions and Spirituality Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 363 - Sociocultural Analysis of Black Languages Units: 3  
also listed as LING 363  

 —–

AFRAS 385 - African American Music Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AFRAS 422 - Modern Civil Rights Movement Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 423 - Black Nationalism Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AFRAS 466 - Afrofuturism Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AFRAS 470 - Comparative History: Afro-American and African Heritage Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AFRAS 471 - Africana History Units: 3  

—–

AFRAS 472 - African Enslavement Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AFRAS 476 - History and Culture of Hip Hop Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 110 - American Indian Heritage Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 140 - U.S. History from an American Indian Perspective to 1870 Units: 3 

 

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 141 - U.S. History from an American Indian Perspective Since 1870 Units: 3 

 

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 210 - Indigenous Women and the Arts Units: 3  

3B. Humanities: History, Languages other than English, Literature, Philosophy, Religious Studies

AMIND 300 - American Indian Oral Tradition Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AMIND 320 - American Indians in Contemporary Society Units: 3  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AMIND 331 - The American Indian Political Experience Units: 3  
also listed as POL S 331  

 —–

AMIND 370 - Tribal Gaming: Cultural and Political Context Units: 3  
also listed as HTM 370  

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 420 - Indian Peoples of California Units: 3  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AMIND 430 - American Indian Poetry and Fiction Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AMIND 435 - Indians through Film and Television Units: 3  

6. Ethnic Studies

AMIND 440 - American Indian History Units: 3  

UD 3. Humanities

AMIND 451 - American Indian Identity Units: 3  
also listed as ANTH 451  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AMIND 460 - American Indian Languages Units: 3  
also listed as ANTH 460  and LING 460  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences

AMIND 480 - Issues in American Indian Education Units: 3  

UD 4. Social and Behavioral Sciences 

AMIND 485 - Federal Indian Law Units: 3  

 —–

CCS 100 - Chicana and Chicano Heritage Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 110 - Introduction to Chicana and Chicano Studies Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 120A - Chicana/os and American Government and Politics Units: 3   

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 120B - Chicana/os and California Government and Politics Units: 3   

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 141A - U.S. History from a Chicana/o Perspective to 1865 Units: 3   

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 141B - U.S. History from a Chicana/o Perspective 1865-present Units: 3   

American Institutions Requirement

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 150 - Critical Issues in Chicana Studies Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies
CCS 235 - Comics and Race Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 275 - Sports and Race Units: 3   

 

CCS 306 - Mexican Immigration Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 340A - Gender, Sex, and Politics in Colonial Mexico Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 340B - Chicana Women’s History: 1848-Present Units: 3   

6. Ethnic Studies

CCS 405 - Performing Transnational Citizenship Units: 3   

—–

CCS 450 - Chicano and Latino Theatre Units: 3   

—–

CCS 580 - Chicanas and Chicanos and the Schools Units: 3   

—–