2009-2010 Catalog 
    
    Mar 28, 2024  
2009-2010 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Distributed Studies


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences

Students who are working toward a BA degree in LAS may elect a major in a distributed studies program. The Distributed Studies BS degree is perhaps the most misunderstood degree at UCCS. It is not a “general studies” degree with assorted course work in a variety of subjects. Instead, Distributed Studies is a degree that is structured out of courses offered by two or more programs of study. The Distributed Studies major requires a primary subject area with at least 30 semester hours of course work, of which at least 15 hours must be at the upper division level, and also a secondary subject area with at least 30 hours of course work, of which at least 15 hours must be at the upper-division level. Courses taken as part of a distributed studies major can be counted toward the college area requirements.

The Distributed Studies major was initiated before minors were offered at UCCS; it served the need of students who wanted a concentration of courses outside the major. Now, many students complete a major and minor rather than a distributed studies degree.

There are two approaches to a distributed studies degree: structured interdisciplinary programs  and programs built from stand-alone minors.

Individualized Distributed Studies Built on Stand-alone Minors

Students may design a distributed studies major around a core curriculum provided by the following stand-alone minors:

Pre-Law Minor 
French Minor 
German Minor 
Energy Science Minor 
Leadership Studies Minor 
Professional Writing Program 
Sustainable Development Minor 


In this Distributed Studies option, a stand-alone minor becomes the primary curriculum for the degree. Because a minor requires 18 credit hours, the student must negotiate the remaining 12 hours of primary subject with the director of the minor program. At least 15 hours must be from upper-division courses. No more that 8 credit hours of independent study can be applied to the primary area of concentration.

The student, in consultation with the director of the primary subject, then selects a secondary subject area in which he or she completes 30 credit hours (these cannot include credit hours taken to complete the primary subject requirement). The secondary concentration will consist of 30 credit hours in one discipline, or 30 credit hours divided between two disciplines (15 and 15, or 18 and 12).

The degree requires 60 total credit hours, and students must maintain a 2.0 grade point average in all course work included in the program.

 Before embarking on such a program of study, a student must negotiate a Distributed Studies contract with the director of the stand-alone minor that will constitute the primary area of the program.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences