Mar 28, 2024  
2019-20 Catalog 
    
2019-20 Catalog FINAL VERSION - Closed for Revisions

Associate of Arts and Science (AAS)


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The AAS fulfills our institutional mission of providing access to higher education and a pathway to degree attainment for the residents of Wisconsin. The AAS is transferable to institutions across the UW System and provides you with a liberal arts general education and a breadth of intellectual and practical skills.

  1. General Degree Requirements
  1. You must complete a minimum of 60 credits to receive the AAS. At least 36 of the 60 credits must be earned at the institution’s three campuses.
  2. You must have a grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 earned cumulatively at the institution’s three campuses, and a 2.0 overall GPA in credits applied to the AAS.
  3. The AAS general education requirements must be fulfilled.
  1. Overview of AAS Requirements
  1. Distribution of Credit Requirements
Requirement Associate of Arts and Science
Knowledge of Human Cultures (HC) 9
Knowledge of the Natural World (NW) 9
Additional HC or NW Coursework 3
Critical and Creative Thinking (CCT) 3
Effective Communication 6
Intercultural Knowledge and Competence (IK) 3
Individual, Social, and Environmental Responsibility (SER) 6
Total General Education Credits 39
Electives 21
Total Required Credits to Degree 60
  1. Additional Degree Requirements
    You must fulfill the following degree requirements through general education breadth requirements and/or elective coursework:
  1. Depth sequence (two courses of three or more credits each)
  2. Three credits of Quantitative Literacy coursework (AAS-QL)
  3. An ethnic studies course (ES)
  4. A laboratory science course (LS)
  1. General Education Breadth Requirements
    You must complete general education coursework in a variety of different disciplines based on breadth categories established by the UW System shared learning goals. You must complete coursework in six different breadth categories. Each course is limited to only one breadth category.
  1. Knowledge of Human Cultures (HC)
    Knowledge of Human Cultures (HC) courses focus on analysis of the human condition, culture, and society. This typically includes coursework that requires you to engage with and analyze human interaction and culture, social organization and institutions, historical contexts, and/or complex interdependent systems. The HC requirement typically includes coursework in social sciences, humanities, fine arts, and world languages. If you are in HC courses you can expect to:
  1. describe and evaluate existing knowledge of human cultures;
  2. interpret and analyze data, texts, and/or artifacts; and/or
  3. apply concepts across disciplines.
  1. Knowledge of the Natural World (NW)
    Knowledge of the Natural World (NW) courses focus on concepts and applications related to the natural and physical sciences and mathematics. the NW requirement typically includes coursework in the sciences and mathematics. If you are in NW courses you can expect to:
  1. describe and evaluate existing knowledge of the natural world;
  2. interpret, analyze and communicate data, results, and conclusions; and/or
  3. apply concepts across disciplines.
  1. Critical and Creative Thinking (CCT)
    Critical and Creative Thinking (CCT) courses extend your ability to analyze issues and produce responses that are both systematic and innovative. The CCT requirement can be fulfilled with qualifying coursework in any discipline. If you are in CCT classes you can expect to:
  1. identify and investigate problems;
  2. execute analytical or creative tasks; and/or
  3. combine or synthesize existing ideas, images, or expertise in ways that result in a unique and identifiable product.
  1. Effective Communication
    Written and Oral communication courses support and assess your development of reading, listening, speaking, information literacy, and/or writing proficiencies. This requirement is similar to the Foundation level Written and Oral Communication requirement in the General Education Program (GEP).

    You must complete:
    1. ENGL 150  or ENGL 202  (3 credits) with a grade of C or higher.
    2.  Three (3) additional credits of EC coursework.
  1. Intercultural Knowledge and Competence (IK)
    Intercultural Knowledge and Competence (IK) courses prepare you to live and work in diverse contexts. Courses with this degree designation focus on building cross-cultural communication, interaction, and empathy with people from diverse backgrounds and cultures. The IK requirement typically includes coursework in the social sciences, humanities, fine arts, world languages, and ethnic studies. If you are in IK courses you can expect to:
  1. develop cultural self-awareness in the context of diverse human cultures; and/or
  2. develop strategies for effectively and appropriately negotiating intercultural interactions.
  1. Individual, Social and Environmental Responsibility (SER)
    Individual, Social and Environmental Responsibility (SER) courses provide the foundation for lifelong learning and the intellectual tools for engaging ethically as members of society. The SER requirement can be fulfilled with qualifying coursework in any discipline and often includes high impact teaching practices or other active learning strategies. If you are in SER courses you can expect to:
  1. engage in active learning to explore ethical, social, and/or environmental issues; and/or
  2. apply knowledge and skills for the purpose of civic engagement.
  1. Depth Requirement
    The UW System Associate Degree Standards require each student to complete “a two-course sequence in which the first course provides the foundation for the second.” You fulfill this requirement by taking a disciplinary depth sequence identified by an academic department or program. One or both courses may be transferred in from another institution.

    Sets of courses in a depth sequence must meet the following criteria:
  1. Both courses are in the same discipline (and not just in the same department or program).
  2. Both courses are at least three credits.
  3. Learning from the first course lays a foundation for learning in the second course. However, the foundation course does not need to be a prerequisite for the second course.
  4. You take the second course in a different semester or term. The semesters do not need to be contiguous.
  5. The depth requirement does not include skills courses that lay a foundation for academic literacy (developmental education, non-degree ESL, and ENGL 101 ) or lecture forum courses.
  1. Quantitative Literacy (AAS-QL)
    You must complete a minimum of three credits of AAS-QL coursework. A qualifying course focuses on college-level algebraic reasoning, probability, and/or statistics and has MATH 107  as a prerequisite. You must fulfill at least one of these requirements:
  1. Complete a quantitative literacy course (or an equivalent transfer course) with a grade of C or higher.
  2. Complete a mathematics course that has a AAS-QL course as a prerequisite with a grade of C or higher, or
  3. Place into MATH 225  (Calculus I) through the math placement process.

You may take more than one course to complete the required three credits. Quantitative literacy courses may fulfill breadth and depth degree requirements.

  1. Laboratory Science (LS)
    You must complete at least one laboratory science course. LS courses are offered as part of or in connection with a lecture/discussion natural or physical science course, and they normally fulfill a general education breadth requirement. In laboratory science courses, you engage in empirical study of the natural world to enhance learning. To carry the LS degree designation, a science course must have at least one of the following active learning components as a regularly scheduled part of the course:
  1. Learning activities in a laboratory or field setting;
  2. Extensive use of scientific methods for student investigation, experimentation, and/or observation;
  3. Active student participation in analysis and interpretation of data, using scientific tools, methods, conceptual frameworks, theories, and/or models.
  1. Ethnic Studies (ES)
    You must take one ES course. Courses fulfilling the ES requirement have a substantial emphasis on cultural diversity issues and ethnic minorities within the United States.
  1. Elective Credits
    In addition to completing general education requirements, you take elective credits to fulfill the required minimum of 60 degree credits for an associate degree. Elective credits often include courses that lead to an emphasis or other educational goals. You may take courses with an elective (EL) designator and/or additional coursework from the associate degree breadth categories.
  1. AAS with Emphasis
    If you are pursuing the AAS Degree you may elect to receive a degree with emphasis; a concentration of coursework in a given discipline or in more than one discipline, in the case of interdisciplinary emphasis. An AAS degree with emphasis:
  1. Allows you to expand your knowledge and skills in areas of personal, professional and academic interest;
  2. May provide career advancements, personal enrichment and more job opportunities.

The specific requirements for a Degree with Emphasis are determined by individual departments; however, an AAS Degree with Emphasis must include the following:

  1. Any AAS Degree with Emphasis must also conform to, and you must satisfy, all other requirements for an AAS Degree.
  2. For a single-discipline AAS Degree with Emphasis, a minimum of 9 credits in the discipline.
  3. In the case of an interdisciplinary AAS Degree with Emphasis, a minimum of 9 credits among the disciplines represented. Additionally, eligible courses must be approved by all departments represented in the emphasis. However, eligible courses in supporting departments (e.g. math courses for a Physics Emphasis) need not be approved by the supporting department
  4. No courses may be included in an AAS Degree with Emphasis if they do not meet requirements of a related UWSP major or minor baccalaureate program.

Academic units are not required to offer an AAS Degree with Emphasis. If you are declaring an emphasis, you can do so at any time after enrollment, but no later than the beginning of your final semester before receiving your degree so that it can be noted officially. If you want to pursue a Bachelor Degree, be sure to tell your adviser. Your adviser can help you select elective credits which may be applied to your future major for the Bachelor Degree.

For more information about the Associate Degree requirements, please visit:

Academic and Career Advising Center
Room 320 Albertson Hall (ALB)
Phone: 715-346-3226
Fax: 715-346-3724
Email: acac@uwsp.edu

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