Sociology Course Distribution Sheet
On this page is the current credit distribution sheet for the 2021-2022 academic year. Download this information as a PDF.
Our distribution sheets list all of the requirements for each catalog year, please visit the Undergraduate Catalog for that information or review the relevant year below.
Sociology (31 Hours)
• SOCI 100 General Sociology (3 hours)
• SOCI 301 Synthesizing within Sociology (3 hours)
• SOCI 306 Quantitative Sociological Research OR SOCI 308 Social Research (3 hours)
• SOCI 307 Quantitative Sociological Research Laboratory OR SOCI 308 Social Research Laboratory (1 hour)
• SOCI 411 Sociological Theory (3 hours)
• 18 credit hours of SOCI courses with at least 6 credit hours at the 400-level
English (9 Hours)
• ENGL 101 Introduction to Academic Writing(3 hours)
• ENGL 102 Writing and Research About Culture (3 hours)
• ENGL 2xx Literature (3 hours)
History (6 Hours)
HIST xxx (6 hours)
Modern Language (10 Hours)
Choose sequence in American Sign Language (ASL), French (FREN), German (GERM) or Spanish (SPAN).
• MODL 101 (4 hours)
• MODL 102 (3 hours)
• MODL 201 (3 hours)
Math (6 Hours)
• MATH 102 Quantitative Reasoning OR (MATH 103 AND MATH 104) OR MATH 105 College Algebra
• STAT 214 Elementary Statistics (3 hours)
Science (9 Hours)
9 credit hours of SCI electives are to be chosen from both biological (BIOL) and physical (CHEM, GEOL, or PHYS) sciences, two courses of which must be from the same science.
Communication (3 Hours)
• CMCN 100 Principles of Human Communication (3 hours)
Arts (3 Hours)
3 credit hours of Art, must be chosen from advisor-approved list.
Behavioral Science (12 Hours)
ANTH201 Cultural Anthropology
POLS 3/400
6 credits hours of behavioral science in Anthropology, Economics, Geography, Political Science, or Psychology.
Minor (18 Hours)
• 18 credit hours in your minor.
• 6 credit hours of the 18 credit hours must be at the 3/4xx level.
• No more than one course grade of D in the minor.
Electives (10 Hours)
• UNIV 100 (3 hours)
7 credit hours of electives of the students choice.