To: Executive Committee, College of Letters and Science
From: xx, Chair, History
Re: Revision of General Education Program
Our departmental Curriculum Committee has discussed your November 18 document on this subject. I offer the following comments, based on that discussion.
To reiterate, increasing the number of GE courses is certainly a good idea but not if it is done by ignoring the criteria.
Resource incentives should be extended to departments that are willing to create new courses or modify existing ones to meet the criteria. we are aware of no data that supports the assumption that "bottlenecks" in the GEP are preventing the timely graduation of students. on the contrary, UCSB, with the most demanding general education program in the UC system, has the best time-to-degree record. There are other reasons than a lack of space in GE courses to explain why students are taking longer to graduate (e.g., financial stringency as fees rise, delaying the choice of a major, excessive major requirements in some fields, etc.).
This may well be the time for a systemwide discussion of GE principles. It is not the time to emasculate UCSB's GEP (which was singled out for praise in our recent accreditation review). If faculty in some departments are "underutilized," we should not reconfigure the GEP in order to utilize them. Underutilization is no reason to turn the GEP into a General Utilization Program. It is, rather, a reason to use the resource allocation process to encourage departments to create new GE courses.