Northwestern Ilinois University Bachelors of Liberal Arts and Science

Higher at Northwestern Academy

Judd A. and Marjorie Weinberg Higher of Arts and Sciences
Blazon Private
Established 1851; 171 years ago  (1851)
Dean Adrian Randolph

Academic staff

600+ [ane]
Undergraduates 4,300+ [1]
Location

Evanston

,

Illinois

,

USA

Website www.weinberg.northwestern.edu
WCASlogo.png

The Judd A. and Marjorie Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences (WCAS or Weinberg Higher) is the largest of the twelve schools comprising Northwestern University, located in Evanston, Illinois and downtown Chicago, Illinois.

It was established in 1851 and today comprises 25 departments and many specialty programs. Weinberg likewise has special agreements with Chicago'southward major cultural institutions, including the Field Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Adler Planetarium, Chicago Botanic Garden, and American Bar Foundation, to offer courses taught by Chicago-area experts.[2]

Academics [edit]

Weinberg enrolls students in its classes from all of Northwestern'due south undergraduate schools, including the Medill School of Journalism, Bienen School of Music, McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, Schoolhouse of Communication, and School of Education and Social Policy. All faculty members in Weinberg teach undergraduate students.

Degree requirements specify that each Weinberg educatee should demonstrate writing and foreign language proficiency (by taking sure courses), complete two first-twelvemonth seminars (small specialized courses with 15 students), complete ii courses in each area of distribution requirements (2 units must exist completed in each of the post-obit areas: Natural Sciences, Formal Studies, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Historical Studies, Ideals and Values, and Literature and Fine Arts), and complete a WCAS major.[iii] Weinberg graduates receive the Available of Arts, Bachelor of Science, or Bachelor of Philosophy degree.[4]

Each get-go-year student in Weinberg is required to take two "First-Year Seminars," 15 or sixteen students in each, focused on the development of writing and word skills. A showtime-yr educatee's typical schedule each quarter includes a small class of fifteen students, a form of 20-25 students, and two larger lecture courses. Concluding year fewer than x of more than than 2000 courses in Weinberg College enrolled over 300 students.[2]

About three per centum of student enrollments are in courses taught exclusively past teaching assistants, mostly in small introductory courses in strange languages; all other courses are taught by professors.[2] The number of men and women in Weinberg is about equal; 30 pct of undergraduates vest to racial or ethnic minorities. Students also come up from all l states; Illinois is the home of the largest number of students, followed by California, Ohio, and New York. 7 percentage of Weinberg students are from foreign countries.[2]

Each year, faculty members associated with several of Northwestern's graduate programs teach undergraduates. Professors from the Kellogg School of Management offer courses in accounting, finance, and marketing especially designed for Weinberg students. Law School faculty each yr teach several undergraduate courses in Weinberg as well.

Areas of Written report [edit]

Weinberg has 15 interdisciplinary programs that offer minors or majors. These include American studies, European studies, Integrated Scientific discipline Programme (ISP), Legal Studies, Mathematical Experience for Northwestern Undergraduates (Card), Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences (MMSS), and the Writing Major. Each of these programs has special admissions requirements.[2]

The following is a listing of courses of study which can be pursued at Weinberg:[5]

  • African American Studies (major, minor)
  • African and Asian Languages Plan (minor in Chinese Language and Culture, pocket-size in Japanese Language and Culture)
  • African Studies (adjunct major, small-scale)
  • American Studies (major)
  • Anthropology (major, minor)
  • Art History (major, small)
  • Art Theory and Practice (major)
  • Asian American Studies (pocket-size)
  • Asian Studies (adjunct major and minor in Asian Studies, major in Asian Languages and Civilizations)
  • Astronomy (major, minor)
  • Biological Sciences (major)
  • Business Institutions (minor)
  • Catholic studies (modest)
  • Central and Southeastern European Studies (minor)
  • Chemistry (major, minor)
  • Chinese Language and Culture (pocket-size)
  • Classics (major; minor concentrations in Latin, Greek, and Classical Studies)
  • Cognitive Scientific discipline (major, pocket-size)
  • Comparative Literary Studies (major in Comparative Literary Studies, minor in World Literature)
  • Informatics (major, pocket-size)
  • Computing and Information Systems (major)
  • Critical Theory (small)
  • Drama (major)
  • Earth and Planetary Sciences (major, minor)
  • Economics (major, minor)
  • English (major, small-scale)
  • Environmental Policy and Civilization (minor)
  • Ecology Sciences (major) (cantankerous-school program)
  • Evolutionary Processes (pocket-size)
  • Film & Media Studies (small) (School of Communication program)
  • Financial Economic science (document) (Kellogg School of Management program)
  • French (major, small-scale)
  • Gender & Sexuality Studies (major, minor)
  • Geography (adjunct major, modest)
  • High german (major, minor)
  • Global Health Studies (adjunct major, small-scale)
  • Hebrew (small)
  • History (major, minor)
  • Humanities (minor)
  • Integrated Scientific discipline (major)
  • International Studies (adjunct major, small)
  • Italian (major, minor)
  • Japanese Language and Culture (minor)
  • Jewish Studies (major and minor in Jewish Studies, minor in Hebrew Studies)
  • Latin America and Caribbean area Studies (minor)
  • Latina and Latino Studies (major, modest)
  • Legal Studies (adjunct major, minor)
  • Linguistics (major, minor)
  • Managerial Analytics (certificate) (Kellogg School of Management program)
  • Materials Science (major, pocket-sized)
  • Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences (adjunct major)
  • Mathematics (major, pocket-size)
  • Middle E Studies (adjunct major and small in Middle Due east Studies, major in Middle East Languages and Civilizations)
  • Neuroscience (major)
  • Philosophy (major, modest)
  • Physics (major, minor)
  • Political Science (major, minor)
  • Psychology (major, minor)
  • Religious Studies (major and minor in Religious Studies, minor in Catholic Studies)
  • Science in Human being Civilization (adjunct major, minor)
  • Slavic Languages and Literature (major in Slavic Languages and Literature, minor concentrations in Russian and in Slavic Studies, and in Fundamental and Southeastern European Studies)
  • Sociology (major, small)
  • Audio Design (minor) (cross-school program)
  • Castilian and Portuguese (major and minor in Castilian)
  • Statistics (major, minor)
  • Transportation and Logistics (small-scale) (cross-school programme)
  • Urban Studies (adjunct major)
  • World Literature (pocket-size)

Notable alumni [edit]

  • Madeleine Fly Adler ('62) - president, West Chester University of Pennsylvania
  • Leigh Alexander ('79) - principal marketing officer, Unisys
  • Marie Arana ('71) - volume editor, Washington Post
  • Lee Phillip Bell ('50) - creator, The Young and the Restless and The Assuming and the Cute
  • Saul Bellow ('37) - Nobel Prize-winning writer
  • Anthony Bozza ('93), New York Times best-selling author; former Rolling Stone comprehend story writer
  • Nicholas Chabraja ('64) - chairman and CEO, General Dynamics
  • Douglas Conant ('73) - president and CEO, Campbell Soup Company
  • Luke Donald ('01) - professional golfer
  • D. Cameron Findlay ('82) - executive vice president and full general counsel, Aon Corporation; former Deputy Secretary of Labor
  • Christopher Galvin ('73) - chairman, NAVTEQ Corp; former president and CEO, Motorola, Inc.
  • Angela Jackson ('77) - poet, author, playwright
  • Jeff Jacobs ('92) - manager of beverage new business organization development, Campbell Soup Company
  • Tim Johnson ('83) - picture director
  • Marc Kirschner ('66) - prison cell biological science section chair, Harvard Medical School
  • Jim Kolbe ('65) - U.S. Congressman
  • Glenn Loury ('72) - Brown University economist
  • Todd Martin ('92) - former professional person tennis actor
  • James McNaught ('90) - U.S. Land Section officeholder, Afghanistan
  • John Musker ('75) - Disney drawing director
  • Dawn Clark Netsch ('48) - former state legislator and a primal figure in Illinois politics
  • Phyllis Oakley ('56) - diplomat, quondam top intelligence adviser to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
  • William Osborn ('69) - president and CEO, Northern Trust Corporation
  • Eva Paterson ('71) - ceremonious rights chaser
  • Sidney Sheldon ('38) - romance novelist
  • David Skorton ('70) - president, Cornell Academy
  • Rick Sund ('73) - full general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics basketball team
  • William Tuohy ('51) - foreign correspondent and Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Edward Weiler ('71) - director, NASA Goddard Space Flying Center
  • Fred "The Hammer" Williamson ('lx) - actor
  • Paul Winter ('61) - musician; founder, Paul Wintertime Espoused

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Northwestern Facts, About, Northwestern University
  2. ^ a b c d due east Weinberg College Facts, Welcome, WCAS, Northwestern Academy
  3. ^ [1] Archived February 25, 2006, at the Wayback Car
  4. ^ Degrees Awarded-August 2001-June 2002
  5. ^ List of Majors and Minors in Weinberg College, Majors, Minors, and Certificates, Undergraduate Students, WCAS, Northwestern University

External links [edit]

  • Weinberg College Facts
  • Notable Alumni listing

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weinberg_College_of_Arts_and_Sciences

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