Skip to main content
UVA Rotunda with statue of Poet Homer facing the Rotunda
Engagements at UVA

Develop your intellectual curiosity, hear new perspectives, question your assumptions, build skills and knowledge, all while learning from world-class faculty from the moment you step on Grounds. 

The Engagements

At the core of the Arts & Sciences General Education Curriculum are The Engagements, a series of four courses all students take during their first year studies in the College. Students will take one course in each of the four following categories. 

''
A general education should help you explore our world through the lens of human creativity in its many forms. In their shaping of materials, language, space, and sound, artists, architects, writers, and composers reinterpret the world, showing us vital ways of thinking about our present, our past, and the natural world. We will explore how their work provokes our most visceral emotional responses and invites engaged intellectual reflection and interpretation.
''
A general education should help you make sense of the world and cosmos by analyzing observable evidence and using formal and quantitative reasoning. Both within and beyond the university, you will encounter claims about the natural and social worlds and be confronted with situations that require you to evaluate and make decisions based on evidence. Empirical methods are a crucial component to addressing and answering such a broad range of essential questions.
Photo Credit: Sanjay Suchak
A general education should help you examine how people produce, perceive, and negotiate difference. In a pluralistic world, how will we live with one another? Both within the university and beyond, you will encounter a range of ways in which people differ across space and time. While these differences often challenge our capacity to understand one another, engaging difference can provide opportunities for deeper knowledge of human and nonhuman interactions.
''
A general education should help you reflect upon and deliberate about your lives as ethical agents. Throughout your life, you will encounter questions of right and wrong, liberty and obligation, justice and mercy; you will be responsible for whatever conception of the “good” you use to structure and orient your lives. We will consider how to understand ethical reflection and practice while acknowledging that some differences on ethical questions are irreconcilable.