Dec 21, 2024  
2024-2025 SLCC General Catalog 
  
2024-2025 SLCC General Catalog

Social & Behavioral Sciences: AA


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Programs and Areas of Study

Associate of Arts | 61 credits

Program Website
Academic Advising

Program Description
The A.A. in Social & Behavioral Sciences is a “general transfer degree” designed to function as the default degree for all students in the “Social & Behavioral Sciences Area of Study” if a declared major program hasn’t been selected.

The degree serves students by providing structured guidance toward developing knowledge and skills in the social and behavioral sciences, including research skills and language skills. It prepares them to declare a major at SLCC or upon transfer to a university. The degree can fulfill two or three foundational courses or some other requirement in a major program at a university, along with ample flexibility to fulfill general elective requirements.

Other benefits of this general transfer degree are: 

  • It may act as an exploratory degree for students who may be unsure about a specific program or programs,
  • It can work as a way for students who have changed majors from another school to move into the Social & Behavioral Sciences “Area of Study” more readily.

Students will be assessed according to how well they achieve the following learning outcomes:  

  1. Demonstrate an understanding of science as a way of knowing about the social world.  
  2. Apply disciplinary theories, concepts, and methods to increase understanding of human behavior, social interaction, and social institutions.  
  3. Explain the diverse ways in which humans organize, structure, rationalize, and govern their societies and cultures over time.  
  4. Demonstrate fundamental skills in research, such as rigorous and ethical scientific thinking, how issues are objectified for study, how data is collected and analyzed, and how new understandings of social phenomena are achieved, evaluated, and disseminated. 

Disciplines that make up this Social and Behavioral Sciences degree include:

  • Anthropology
  • Economics
  • Education
  • Ethnic Studies
  • Family and Human Studies
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Social Work
  • Sociology

Transfer/Articulation Information
Please refer to the Student Resources section of the SLCC University Transfer webpage.

Estimated Cost for Students
Tuition and student fees: http://www.slcc.edu/student/financial/tuition-fees.aspx
Books: $35 to $125
Supplies: $0 to $20
Course Fees: $0 to $50

General Education Requirements


Complete all General Education courses. Refer to Notes for program-specific requirements and recommendations.

  

Courses that meet General Education requirements may be used to meet program requirements where indicated. If this option is chosen, students must complete additional program or elective courses to meet the total credit hour requirement. Please meet with an academic advisor to discuss options.

Program General Education Notes


American Institutions (AI) (Recommended):

Quantitative Literacy (QL) (Recommended):

Communications (CM) (Recommended):

International & Global (IG) (Recommended):

Humanities (HU) (Recommended):

Life Science (LS) ​​​​​​​(Recommended):

Physical Science (PS) ​​​​​​​(Recommended):

Social Science (SS) ​​​​​​​(Recommended):

Social Science + Diversity (SS/DV) ​​​​​​​(Recommended):

Program Requirements


Required Courses (13 credits)


Pathways Course (1 course)


Choose one “Pathways” course or any “SS” or “SS,DV” course. Requirement met if taken to fulfill General Education “SS” area. Take instead a course from the “Allied” category.

Allied Course - 1 course


If needed, choose any course at the 1000-level or higher with the following prefixes:

  • ANTH, ATMO, BUS, CHL, COMM, CJ, CPS, ECON, EDU, ENGL, ESL, ETHS, FHS, FIN, GEOG, HIST, HUMA, IDS, INTL, LE, MATH, MGT, MKTG, POLS, PHIL, PSY, RELS, SOC, SLSS, SW (with or without “SS” or “SS,DV” designations)

Or from the following individual courses:

  • ENVS 1400, BIOL 2220, CSIS 1070, CTEL 1010, ENGR 1070, FLM 1070, HLTH 1050, HLTH 1110, HS 2050, LANG 1010, LS 1010, LS 1020, LIS 2030, MORT 1010, MORT 1100, MUSC 1040, MUSC 1080.

Allied courses cannot already fulfill other degree requirements.

Language Course - 1 course


Take a language course with the “LN” designation (numbered 1020, 2010, 2020 or SPN 2040 or another “heritage-speaker” course), or by taking a language proficiency exam that awards 5 credits at the 1020-level.

Note: 1000-level LANG courses are 5 credit hours; 2000-level LANG courses are 4 credit hours.

Exploration Course - 1 course (if needed)


Take only if threshold of 13 credit hours has not been met by other program categories above.

Choose any course at the 1000-level or higher with the following prefixes: ANTH, ECON, EDU, ETHS, FHS, POLS, PSY, SOC, or SW (with or without “SS” or “SS,DV” designations).

Exploration courses cannot already fulfill other degree requirements.

Elective Courses (14-15 credits)


  • Choose any courses at the 1000-level or higher in any discipline.

Note Taking language conversation courses (1 credit hour) can be repeated; CLAC courses (1-2 credit hours) may be combined with “parent” courses (3 credit hours); and special topics (1-3 credit hours), or other language-prefix courses, can be arranged to arrive at 13 or 14 credit hours.

Time to Completion & Graduation Map


Program Learning Outcomes


Program learning outcome alignment with Student Learning Outcomes in brackets.

  • Demonstrate an understanding of science as a way of knowing about the social world. [1,2,3,4,6,8,9]

  • Apply disciplinary theories, concepts, and methods to increase understanding of human behavior, social interaction, and social institutions. [1,2,3,4,6,8,9]

  • Explain the diverse ways in which humans organize, structure, rationalize, and govern their societies and cultures over time. [1,2,4,6,8]

  • Demonstrate fundamental skills in research, such as rigorous and ethical scientific thinking, how issues are objectified for study, how data is collected and analyzed, and how new understandings of social phenomena are achieved, evaluated, and disseminated. [1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9]

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Programs and Areas of Study