Overview:
When a course holds American Cultures (AC) status, it means that the first instructor to offer that course developed course content and assignments towards a critical engagement with race, ethnicity, and culture, past, present, and future, and as it is created/contested in the meanings and experiences in the U.S.
To ensure this approach is maintained, course proposals are first reviewed by the Academic Senate's Subcommittee on the American Cultures Breadth Requirement, a Senate body responsible for ensuring courses meet the AC requirement standards.
Evaluation Criteria:
The subcommittee evalutes:
- "Does the course address theoretical and analytical issues relevant to understanding race, culture, and ethnicity?" How?
- "Is the course integrative and comparative within the larger context of American society, history, culture, economy, or environment?" How?
- "Does the course take substantial account of groups drawn from at least three of the following: African Americans, indigenous peoples of the United States, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and European Americans?" How is each group incorporated into the course?
Required Materials:
The subcommitee asks that you send them:
- A copy of your detailed course syllabus.
- To assist them in reviewing it, the subcommittee also requests a cover letter that addresses how the course meets the AC requirement in a long narrative.
Review Sessions and Submission Deadlines:
Review meetings occur monthly and proposal are due by 5 p.m. on the Friday before the Subcommitee monthly meeting. Review current AMCULT submission deadlines and meeting schedule. Final COCI review follow shortly after the AC Subcommittee meeting.
Semester Submission Deadlines:
(Effective Fall 2022) – American Cultures Proposals (New Courses and Instructor Changes) must be submitted by the Friday prior to the Subcommittee meeting in November for the Spring Semester, March for Summer Sessions, and April for the Fall Semester.