- What is the CUNY Baccalaureate (BA) Program?
The CUNY Baccalaureate (BA) Program.
Overview & Goals
The CUNY Baccalaureate Program is a unique and exciting program that allows you to earn a Bachelor of Arts or Science degree from the City University of New York. It is your chance to design your own curriculum that is tailored to your academic, professional and personal interests. In addition, the program has the special advantage of allowing you to take courses at any combination of the University's seventeen undergraduate colleges, the Graduate School, The School of Professional Studies, and On-line courses. You are encouraged to include independant studies, internships, tutorials, honors courses, graduate level courses and study abroad for your degree.
The CUNY BA student is a highly motivated and responsible student with the vision and drive to design their own degree. There is virtually no limit to the possiblities open to the CUNY BA student.
Students in the program have created
and completed such specializations as: Disability Studies, Cross-Cultural
Psychology, Conservation Biology, Environmental Chemistry, Artistic
Traditions in Religion, International Economic Relations, Culinary
Journalism, Food in a Cultural Context, Afro-Caribbean Urban Studies,
Management and Sociology, Black Culture and Religion, Behavioral
Science and Community Health, Law of International Trade and Commerce,
Applied Interactive Multimedia Studies, Entrepreneurship, and Geriatric
Health Issues.
Alumni of the program have been accepted to graduate programs
and professional schools across the country.
The CUNY Baccalaureate staff looks forward to working with you.
The CUNY Baccalaureate Program has three goals:
- To encourage students to avail themselves of the extraordinary
resources and learning opportunities available at the City University's
seventeen undergraduate colleges and at the Graduate School
- To allow self-directed, academically able students to design,
with faculty guidance, an undergraduate area of specialization
that complements their unique academic, professional, and personal
goals
- To foster intellectual explorations and responsible educational
innovation by permitting students to use a variety of learning
strategies.
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Academic Standards
The CUNY Baccalaureate Program maintains high academic standards.
To be eligible for admission, students must become matriculated at a CUNY
college, have passed all the CUNY skills assessment tests, and have earned
at least 15 credits with a minimum grade point average of 2.50 overall
and on recent work. Once admitted, students are required to maintain a
2.50 average overall and in their area(s) of concentration.
Students take a minimum of 60 credits in the liberal arts and sciences
for the BS, 90 for the BA; within those credits, they satisfy a 13-course
core distribution requirement that includes a year of foreign language.
All courses for the distribution must be taken for letter grades.
At least 75 percent of the credits for the CUNY degree must be
earned in regular course work, and half of any area of concentration
must be completed in CUNY as a CUNY Baccalaureate student. All
credits for an area of concentration must be approved by a CUNY
faculty member mentor and taken for letter grades at senior colleges
that offer the appropriate bachelor's degree.
Students may earn up to 30 credits for non-classroom work such
as credit by examination. Up to 15 of the 30 non-classroom credits
may be awarded for prior experiential learning based on faculty
evaluation of a portfolio documenting what the student has learned.
About 16 percent of CUNY Baccalaureate students earn some credit
in this way.
The City University of New York awards the CUNY BA and BS degrees,
and the program is accredited by the Middle States Association
of Colleges and Schools and by the New York State Education Department
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Faculty Mentors
The Programs Mission is to foster intelectual exploration and responisble innovation. The degree's heart is the learning partnership between you and a faculty mentor. Faculty mentors assume the key academic responsibility of ensuring that
their student's area of concentration will prepare him or her for graduate
work in the same field. Students must have a mentor with the expertise in
each area of concentration they choose. With the mentor's guidance, the
student selects the courses to be taken for the area. These courses must
be interrelated, be at the intermediate or advanced level (i.e., they normally
have at least one prerequisite in the same discipline), and must be taken
for a letter grade at a senior college offering the appropriate bachelor's
degree. There must be at least eight such courses for a single area, six
for a dual area, more if the mentor knows that more are needed.
The rule of thumb is simple: if the selected courses will not
provide the student with the background and preparation needed
for admission to a master's program, the area of concentration
is not adequate or academically valid. The large percentage of
program alumni accepted into graduate programs shows that this
responsibility is understood and conscientiously fulfilled.
To be eligible to serve as mentors, faculty must have professorial
rank or be lecturers with a full-time teaching position with in
the City University. Currently 500 CUNY faculty are contributing
their time and expertise to mentoring CUNY Baccalaureate students;
most are Full or Associate Professors.
The relationship of mentors and students varies as greatly as
the individuals involved. Factors that shape the relationship include
a student's needs and strengths, the level of independence with
witch faculty mentors and students are comfortable, a student's
preferred learning style, a mentor's supervisory style, and the
amount of time a mentor can spare for this voluntary service.
The ideal mentor ensures that the student's area of concentration
is academically sound, monitors the student's academic progress,
and takes the trouble to call the Academic Director of the program
with any questions or concerns.
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Admission Criteria
To be eligible for admission, a student must:
- Become matriculated at a CUNY college
- Have a valid academic reason for applying
- Have completed at least 15 credits (including transfer credits)
- Have a GPA of at least 2.50 overall and on recent work
- Have passed all three CUNY Skills Assessment Tests-unless they
were first matriculated at a college before fall 1978.
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Degree Requirements
The CUNY
BA/BS staff is responsible for ensuring that students satisfy the
program's degree requirements, including completion of the courses
approved by the mentor [s] for the area [s] of concentration. Individual
requirements are listed in the degree contract each student receives
and signs upon being admitted to the program.
Note: CUNY Baccalaureate students must satisfy all departmental
course prerequisites, but they are not bound by major-minor requirements
at the colleges they attend nor by core, distribution, or other
degree requirements of those colleges.
Classroom credits
At least 90 credits of the 120 minimum required for the degree
must be earned in regular course work.
Liberal Arts and Sciences Core Distribution
CUNY BA/BS students must complete at least 60 credits in the liberal
arts and sciences (90 for a BA) including the following distribution
requirements:
- Two courses in literature
- one can be in a language other than English
- Three courses in humanities exclusive of the required literature
courses and in subjects other than the area(s) of concentration,
chosen from at least two different disciplines
- Three courses in social sciences in subjects other that the
area(s) of concentration, chosen from at least two different
disciplines
- Completion at level 2 of a language other than English.
This requirement can be waived for:
- students who successfully completed three years of language
and passed the third year Regents exam in high school;
- students, including those whose native language is not English,
who demonstrate equivalent proficiency by examination through
an approved language program or a college language department
- students who attended high school in another country where
the instruction was not in English.
Three courses in Mathematics and Science in subjects other that the
area(s) of concentration. Students must take one Mathematics and
one Science course. The third course may be a Mathematics, Science,
or Computer Science course that is designated by the CUNY Baccalaureate
Program as a liberal arts and sciences course.
Note: The program's definition of liberal arts and sciences, which
is in the CUNY Baccalaureate Program catalog, prevails over local
definition. Nonclassroom credits and courses graded Pass are not
accepted for the core distribution.
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Area(s) of Concentration
An area of concentration consists -- above and beyond introductory
level and prerequisite courses -- of a minimum of eight courses
(24 credits) of intermediate and advanced level course work approved
by a faculty mentor in the appropriate discipline(s) and taken
for letter grades at a senior college offering a bachelor's degree
in the appropriate field. Students choosing two areas of concentration
take at least six courses (18 credits) in each area. Half of
the credits for any area must be completed in CUNY as CUNY Baccalaureate
students.
Any CUNY BA/BS student wishing to pursue a business concentration
at Baruch College must meet all course prerequisites required of
Baruch BBA degree students.
Lower - Division Credits
No more than 60 community college credits are accepted toward a
CUNY BA/BS degree.
GPA
Students must maintain a 2.50 GPA overall and a 2.50 average in
their area(s) of concentration for all course work done in CUNY.
Residency
There is a 30-credit residency requirement; up to 15 credits earned
for independent study, projects of fieldwork may be counted toward
this requirement, but not credits earned for prior experimental
learning or credits by examination.
Home College
In addition to being a part of the CUNY Baccalaureate program,
each CUNY Baccalaureate student must be matriculated at one of
the CUNY colleges. This is the student's home college where he
or she pays all tuition and fees, takes the university assessment
tests in reading, writing and mathematics, and handles all nonacademic
matters, such as financial aid and obtaining a college ID card.
A community college may be the home college until a student has
earned an associate's degree or accumulated 60 credits, whichever
comes first. At that point, the student must officially transfer
to a senior college, which becomes the new home college.
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Academic Regulations
Non-classroom Credits
Students may earn up to 30 credits for non-classroom work such
as NPONSI (National Program on Non-collegiate Sponsored Instruction,
administered by The University of the State of New York) and
credit by examination. Up to 15 of the 30 non-classroom credits
may be awarded for prior experiential learning. Credit by examination,
NOPONS credit, and Prior experiential Learning credits do not
count toward the Program's 30-credit residency requirement.
Graduate Courses for Undergraduate Credit
With the approval of the appropriate graduate department and of
the program's Academic Director, students may take one or two
courses at the graduate level for undergraduate credit. Approval
is given only to students who have no grades outstanding and
who consistently do high quality work.
Pass/Fail Option
Students may take up to 12 credits on a Pass/Fail basis, provided
that the course is not part of the distribution requirement or
of an area of concentration and that, the department giving the
course offers this option.
Maximum Credit Load/Credit Limits
Students may register for a maximum of 18 credits per semester
(12 credits in the summer) unless they get prior written permission
from the Academic Director to take additional credits. Approval
is given only to students who have no grades outstanding and
who consistently do high quality work. No more than 45 credits
in any one area are accepted toward the degree.
Remedial and English-as-a-Second Language (ESL) Credits
No credits earned in remedial or ESL courses are counted toward
the degree, though such courses do appear on the student's transcript
if they were taken in CUNY.
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Contact
For more information, please contact:
Campus Coordinator
Debra Bick
Center for Academic Advisement
55 Lexington Ave (One Bernard Baruch Way)
New York, NY 10010
(646) 312-4270
E-mail: Debra.Bick@baruch.cuny.edu
You can also see the official CUNY Baccalaureate Program Web Site
at: http://www.cunyba.cuny.edu/.
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