May 23, 2012 By: yunews
Students entering Yeshiva College in September will benefit from an exciting new curriculum that is six years in the making. Yeshiva College’s course offerings have changed and evolved over the years, of course, but this new educational program marks Yeshiva College’s first complete curriculum overhaul since 1928.
Naturally, incoming students have questions. Most of the students about to attend classes for the first time on the Wilf Campus in New York are currently studying in Israel or have recently returned from yeshivot there. They have received the following letter to answer their questions and allay possible concerns:
Dear Students,
This is an exciting time, as registration approaches and you begin to plan for the years you will be on our New York campus, building a solid springboard from which to launch your professional careers and life pursuits.
This new curriculum was designed especially for you, our students, with the sole purpose of giving you the best possible education to prepare you for success and entry into top career positions and graduate schools.
Many of you, however, may have questions or concerns about the new curriculum and how it affects you. Below you can find what will and will not change with the new curriculum, along with frequently asked questions. There is also a dedicated email address ‐ curriculumquestions@yu.edu, and we encourage you to email us there so we can quickly answer your specific issues.
What will not change:
- Under this new curriculum, you will not have to stay in Yeshiva College any longer than you would have before.
- Your AP credits will still be counted for credit (see specific questions below).
- You will continue to gain from our dual curriculum exposing you to the best of Torah U’madda.
- The new core requirements will be fewer classes and credits, giving you more time to focus on your academic discipline and on the general elective courses that you need above the 32 Israel credits.
- Yeshiva College’s grid schedule has been streamlined, with slots for academic Jewish Studies before 3 p.m. and different times for core requirements and major studies, making it easier for you to create a balanced schedule.
- You, along with your peers, will get more exposure to all of the disciplines and fields essential to a college education and beyond.
- You will be taking courses designed to best introduce you to multiple ways of thinking and problem solving
- For pre‐med students, the new curriculum will be excellent preparation for the newly modified MCAT examination, giving you the solid background in Human Behavior you need to excel.
- There are fewer of them (from 14 to 8 courses); the new curriculum’s eight courses streamline the general education requirements.
- They are inter‐disciplinary, introducing you to current topics and problems exciting and relevant to multiple fields rather than immediately launching you into one particular subject area.
- They will help you make an educated choice in selecting a major that best fits your interests and life pursuits, by exposing you to many different academic fields in your first two or three semesters.
- They will expose you to disciplines related to your major; whereas currently a physics major can graduate without any chemistry or biology courses, the new curriculum will prepare you for the twenty‐first century interfacing of disciplines.