B.A. DEGREE GRADUATION
REQUIREMENTS
· a minimum of 128
credits; at least 64 of which must be taken at Bard. · A
minimum of 40 credits outside the division
of major. · Every
student must take two semesters of First-Year Seminar. Transfer students may be exempt. · Every
student must be promoted to the Upper College by passing moderation. · Every
student must complete an acceptable senior project. · Distribution requirement: one
course from each of the appropriate distribution areas.
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GRADUATION
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
(B.
Music and B.A.) 1 A minimum of
160 credits, at least 64 of which must be taken at Bard. 2. A
minimum of 40 credits outside the division of B.A. major. 3. Every
student must take two semesters of First-Year Seminar. Transfer
students may be exempt. 4. Every
student must be promoted to the Upper College by passing moderation. 5. Every
student must complete an acceptable B.A. senior project in a field other than
music. 6.
Distribution requirements: one course from each of the appropriate distribution
areas. 7.
Studio instruction (CNSV 100) in every semester of enrollment for performance
majors. Composition tutorial (CNSV 102) in every semester of
enrollment for composition majors. 8.
Orchestra (CNSV 112) in every semester of enrollment for performance majors. 9.
Chamber music (CNSV 110) in every semester of enrollment for performance
majors. 10.
Conservatory Seminar (CNSV 140, 240, 330, 332) four semesters. 11.
Aural Skills (CNSV 308, 309) two semesters. [Does not apply to students who
enrolled before Fall, 2010. Also, students admitted before Fall, 2012
may satisfy this requirement through CNSV 108 and CNSV 109.] 12.
Music History (MUS 264-265). 13. Conservatory
Senior Project (CNSV 401) - includes recital. [Does not apply to students who
enrolled before Fall, 2011.]
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A. Each student is required to take
four-credits in each of the nine categories listed below. No more than two requirements may be
fulfilled within a single disciplinary program.
Non-native speakers of English may be exempted from the Foreign
Language, Literature, and Culture requirement.
AART Analysis of Arts
(A course in the analysis of non-verbal art)
FLLC Foreign
Language, Literature, and Culture (A course focused
on language acquisition and/or the analysis of literature or culture via an
engagement with a non-English language)
HIST History (A course
focused on historical analysis)
HUM Humanities (A
course focused on the analysis of primary texts in philosophy, religion, or
social thought)
ELIT Literature
in English (A course focused on the literary analysis
and explication of texts in English, either in the original or in translation)
MATC Mathematics
and Computing (A course in mathematics, computing,
statistics or logic; all courses require passing the Q-test as a prerequisite)
PART Practicing Arts
(A studio course in the visual or performing arts, or creative writing)
SCI Laboratory Science
(A laboratory course in the physical or life sciences)
SSCI Social Science
(A course in the empirical social sciences other than history)
DIFF B. In addition, all students must fulfill a “Rethinking
Difference” requirement. The
requirement may be satisfied by any course that is primarily focused on the study
of difference in the context of larger social dynamics. The course may address, but is not limited to addressing,
differences of race, religion, ethnicity, class, gender, and/or sexuality. It may consider, but is not limited to
considering, the contexts of globalization, nationalism, and social
justice. A single course may
simultaneously fulfill both the “Rethinking Difference” requirement and one of
the distribution requirements above.
PATHWAYS
TO GRADUATION
Single
major - Students moderate in one program, complete the course
requirements, and complete one Senior Project.
Single
major with a concentration - Students moderate in both a program
and a concentration, complete the course requirements for both, and
complete one Senior Project that combines the interdisciplinary theories and
methods of both the program and the concentration.
Double
major - Students moderate in two separate programs, complete
the course requirements for both programs, and complete two Senior Projects.
Joint
major - A joint major allows students to achieve depth in two related
fields of study without requiring two separate Senior Projects (as with
a double major). Students complete the course requirements for two
programs of study and produce one unified, integrated Senior Project
involving ideas from both disciplines. Students moderate into two
programs, ideally in a joint moderation, with members from each program on
the moderation board and on the Senior Project board. This option requires
a grade point average of 3.0 or higher and approval by the Executive Committee.