Proposing a Course
Choose Category and Identify Learning Outcomes
Review the General Education Program
- Review the General Education Program, paying attention to the philosophy of the program and its categories.
- Review the General Education Quick Guide (PDF) for an overview of existing courses.
Choose a General Education Category
- Determine the level of your proposed course: Foundations (100-200); Cultures (100-400); or Issues (300-400).
- Choose a General Education category.
Identify Knowledge Outcomes and Skills Outcomes
- Identify the Knowledge Outcomes assigned to the category (General Education Courses by Category).
- Choose the Skills Outcomes from those assigned to the category (see table below).
Requirements to Remember
- Double Dipping. GE courses can double dip (exist in two GE categories), but only in the following combinations: Foundations + Cultures OR Issues + Cultures. GE courses may NOT double-dip as Foundations + Issues OR in 2 Foundations courses (e.g., Philosophy and Literature AND Historical Analysis).
- Prerequisites. Issues courses must have junior standing. Other allowable prerequisites include the completion of a particular Foundations course, though most students complete all Foundation courses prior to beginning Issues courses. GE courses may not be restricted to particular majors or minors.
- Minimum Credits. All Foundations courses must be 3 or more credits. If courses with fewer credits are bundled together to fulfill a Foundation requirement, all courses must teach the same skills associated with the category. All Cultures and Issues courses must be 3 or more credits.
Skills Outcomes by Category
Skill 1 (choose one) |
Skill 2 (choose one) |
Skill 3 |
|
---|---|---|---|
Arts Historical Analysis Life Sciences Mathematical Sciences Philosophy and Literature Physical Sciences |
Collaboration |
Collaboration |
|
Writing |
Written Communication |
Information Literacy |
|
Cultures (2 Skills) |
Skill 1 (choose one) |
Skill 2 (choose one) |
|
Global Perspectives U.S. Diversity |
Collaboration |
Collaboration |
|
Issues (3 Skills) |
Skill 1 |
Skill 2 |
Skill 3 |
Collaboration |
Problem Solving |
Integration |
Submit Course via SAIL
Detailed Guide to SAIL (PDF)
Setting up a New Course
- Log in to SAIL with your GVSU username and password.
- Select New Proposal from the top navigation bar. Then select New Course (or Change Course) from the Start New Proposal menu.
- Complete the new course information and submit.
- Select the blue Edit button to add more details about the new course (full title, transcript copy, prefix number, etc.).
- Be sure to select General Education checkbox under Course is proposed as.
- Complete the New Course form and select submit. You should now see the General Education form.
Completing the General Education and Syllabus of Record Forms
- Complete the General Education form, selecting the appropriate category and SLOs (Skills and Knowledge Outcomes).
- Complete the Syllabus of Record form.
Course Review Process
- To appear in the General Education Catalog for the following fall, courses must be through the entire curriculum process by February 1. Most reviewing bodies ask for amendments. The review process is as follows:
- Faculty Member
- Unit Head
- Library/IT (If online/hybrid, then Online Education Council)
- College Curriculum Committee
- Dean
- General Education Committee
- University Curriculum Committee
- Provost
Special Topics Proposals
Special Topics courses are designed to let you “test drive” a course before you propose it for a permanent course number in SAIL. These courses can be numbered 180, 280, 380, or 480 and be Foundations, Cultures, or Issues courses. Courses may also double dip (exist in two GE categories), but only in the following combinations: Foundations + Cultures OR Issues + Cultures. GE courses may NOT double-dip as Foundations + Issues OR in 2 Foundations courses. Please fill out the form below and email it to [email protected].
- Special Topics - Department - PDF
- Special Topics - Department - MS Word
- List of Special Topics Courses - PDF
Tips for a Better Course Proposal
- Refer to one of our model course proposals for examples of how to write the proposal. Model proposals: CLA 141, PLS 102.
- Write for a non-specialized audience. Most members of the above reviewing bodies are not in your discipline. Please explain discipline-specific ideas and terminology in clear, accessible language. Use examples to clarify.
- Distinguish between teaching and assessing. Teaching is something you do or initiate (e.g., facilitating a discussion, explaining the rubric, teaching students how to collaborate). Assessing is measuring what students have learned (e.g., exam, presentation, paper).
- Plan to teach the Skill SLOs directly. It is not enough to have students give an oral presentation, write a paper, do problem solving, or work in a group. You have to teach them how to do it. Plan to review the appropriate General Education Skill SLOs rubric in class and to show or discuss successful and unsuccessful examples.
- Plan assessments carefully. You must use the General Education Skill SLO rubric to assess students individually. Grades are not an acceptable means of assessment for this process. Remember to assess all of the objectives for each Skill SLO.