51³Ô¹Ïapp is a Catholic university dedicated to educational excellence in the Franciscan tradition. We enhance the lives of our students and help them prepare for their futures by providing experiences that build knowledge, skills, and character. In particular, we help them develop:
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Basic knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, specialized knowledge in a particular area of study, and the ability to integrate knowledge from different academic disciplines.
Learning Objectives:
- Students demonstrate familiarity with diverse cultures, including Western civilization.
- Students describe how knowledge evolves in the arts, the humanities, and the sciences,
and how that knowledge impacts the world.
- Students apply the knowledge and perspectives of a particular discipline in the ways that discipline is practiced.
- Students use what they have learned in their general education studies in their particular discipline.
- Students connect ideas from different disciplines.
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The ability to think constructively, critically, and creatively, including competencies in analytic inquiry, quantitative literacy, information literacy, evidential reasoning, and problem solving.
Learning Objectives:
- Students define effectively an issue, goal, or problem.
- Students identify and obtain the resources that they need to address an issue, goal, or problem.
- Students interpret, assess, and integrate resources with attention to their assumptions and potential biases.
- Students derive conclusions, hypotheses, or solutions that are appropriate to the issue, goal, or problem they are working to address.
- Students assess the validity of their own conclusions, hypotheses, or solutions.
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Competence in multimodal communication with special emphasis on oral, written, and digital communication, including an understanding of key issues relating to their use.
Learning Objectives:
- Students identify and respond to contexts using appropriate processes and modes of delivery.
- Students use effective content and approaches to organization, style, and design that are appropriate for the discipline and genre of communication.
- Students demonstrate control of syntax and mechanics by using language that communicates with clarity, fluency, and minimal errors.
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A disposition to understand societal issues, seek solutions, and become responsible citizens.
Learning Objectives:
- Students identify problems in contemporary societies and analyze factors (i.e ., social
factors, economic factors, political factors, ethnic factors, historical factors, oppression, power, and privilege) that contribute to them.
- Students describe and evaluate various strategies and tactics for addressing contemporary societal problems.
- Students demonstrate personal involvement in addressing societal problems.
- Students reflect critically on their personal experiences in addressing societal problems
through the lens of their academic studies.
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An ability to engage with ultimate questions of a metaphysical, theological,
and philosophical nature.
Learning Objectives:
- Students analyze how ultimate questions have been addressed by major thinkers and movements.
- Students look at ultimate questions from others’ perspectives and compare them with their own perspectives.
- Students formulate and critique their own positions on metaphysical, theological, and philosophical questions.
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A basic understanding of the Catholic tradition and an appreciation of the intellectual and moral virtues expressed in the Franciscan movement (e.g., humility, compassion, justice with peace, love of wisdom, and the inherent goodness of all creation).
Learning Objectives:
- Students identify and describe the major elements of the Catholic tradition, including its expression in the Franciscan movement.
- Students identify and describe the principal intellectual and moral virtues of the Catholic and Franciscan traditions.
- Students relate what they have learned about these virtues to their own lives and social issues.
BONA 101. Introduction to St. Bonaventure
This course will introduce the characteristics and functions of community and diversity, and explain how students belong and thrive at St. Bonaventure. The course will also teach students about effective learning strategies and aspects of college preparation and career development. By exploring facets of St. Bonaventure's mission, and what diversity, equity, and inclusion mean, students can engage in better informed dialogue about their roles as citizens of the world. This course is for students in their first semester of college.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Identify resources and develop skills needed to problem-solve within the macro community of St Bonaventure University in order to complete an academic program.
- Analyze and critique a common experience such as film, book, or lecture.
- Increase awareness and understanding of diversity: students will know basic concepts of diversity and how these intersect and impact individuals and society.
THFS 101. The Way of Francis and Clare
This course is intended to introduce students to the Franciscan roots that underlie the mission and values of 51³Ô¹Ïapp. After familiarizing themselves with the social and cultural context that shaped Francis and Clare of Assisi, students will examine their lives, values and spirituality, and then study how these achieved systematic theological expression in the thought of St. Bonaventure. Students will then connect and apply key Franciscan insights to contemporary concerns.
This course fulfills Goal 6 of the St Bonaventure University Undergraduate Learning Goals and Objectives.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Students will understand and critically analyze the origins and development of the distinctive Franciscan charism within the Catholic faith tradition and its theological expression.
- Students will examine and articulate how this Franciscan tradition might address contemporary social issues in a way that includes people of diverse backgrounds.
- Students will reflect on their personal beliefs about ultimate reality and their relationships in their local context and the global community in the light of Franciscan charism.
- Students will develop an ability to discuss deeply held personal beliefs with sensitivity and openness toward others with differing perspectives.
PHIL 104. Introduction to Ethics
Ethics enquires into the fundamental perspectives and principles that bear on the evaluation of human conduct. It examines prominent theories about what constitutes a good life, articulates relevant principles of right action, poses basic questions about the nature of morality and engages with various moral problems that confront the individual and society. This course endeavors to acquaint students with traditions of moral inquiry and to equip them with key concepts by which to exercise their own moral reflection.
This course fulfills Goals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the St Bonaventure University Undergraduate Learning Goals and Objectives.
Course Learning Objectives: In PHIL 104, students will
- Accurately describe accounts of moral justification developed by philosophers of historical or contemporary significance.
- Apply those accounts to long-standing debates in moral philosophy or novel issues by plausibly interpreting what they do or would say about the debates or issues.
- Develop and justify one’s own considered ethical views by providing moral justification of these views, critiquing them, and improving them in light of anticipated objections and counterexamples.
- Investigate the metaphysics of moral judgments by (a) considering their truth-aptness, fittingness, and/or distinctions from mere preferences or beliefs, AND (b) by discriminating between mere compliance (with professional, legal, or social standards, requirements, or norms) and behavior that is morally justified.
ENG 101. Writing I
A composition course emphasizing writing foundations, including the development of a writing process with attention to generating content and addressing concerns of structure, style, syntax, and mechanics. Course assignments emphasize critical reading, writing, and argumentation skills, as well as professional and oral communication. This course is a prerequisite for ENG 102.
This course fulfills Goal 3 of the St Bonaventure University Undergraduate Learning Goals and Objectives.
Course Learning Objectives: Students who successfully complete the course will be able to
- Demonstrate a writing process involving multiple drafts and strategies for research, invention, drafting, revision, editing, peer review, and reflection.
- Demonstrate understanding of writing as a conversation with other writers through interpretation and synthesis.
- Analyze texts in terms of argument, structure, style and audience.
- Organize writing around a guiding central idea via clearly demarcated and developed claims and transitions.
- Demonstrate the ability to produce writing that meets accepted standards of documentation, format, style, syntax, and mechanics for academic and professional writing.
- Students demonstrate an understanding of multimodality and context by producing effective papers and presentations.
ENG 102. Writing II
A composition course emphasizing the development of a writing process, contextual awareness, and knowledge of conventions of academic and professional discourse. Course assignments foreground advanced communication challenges grounded in research, discipline-specific writing, and multi-model communication, as well as style, syntax and mechanics.
This course fulfills Goal 3 of the St Bonaventure University Undergraduate Learning Goals and Objectives.
Course Learning Objectives: Students who successfully complete the course will be able to
- Demonstrate an advanced writing process with attention to academic research, argumentation, structure, and style.
- Demonstrate understanding of writing as a disciplinary endeavor.
- Analyze texts in terms of disciplinary conventions.
- Organize and develop writing around a central guiding idea appropriate to academic discourse.
- Produce writing that addresses different audiences and purposes and makes use of different modalities, documentation styles, and formats.
- Demonstrate an understanding of multimodality and context by producing effective multimedia and digital texts.