The following graduation requirements apply to all undergraduate students. Meeting graduation requirements is the individual responsibility of each student. The student, with their advisor, should check the student’s plan of study frequently to assure that the student is fulfilling all graduation requirements.
A student must have a minimum of 120 hours of credit acceptable toward graduation. Some courses may not count toward graduation. These restrictions are noted in the course descriptions. Some curricula or combinations of fields require additional credit hours. If all specified requirements are completed with fewer than 120 credit hours, a student must elect sufficient additional course work to total at least 120.
A student may apply for and receive two bachelor's degrees in the same term. To receive two degrees simultaneously, completion of a minimum of 150 credit hours is required. The degrees may be the same (e.g., two B.A. degrees) or different (e.g., a B.A. and a B.S.). The majors may be the same as long as two different sequences are completed. All requirements for both degrees, both majors and sequences, and all general graduation requirements must be met.
Senior college credit hours (courses numbered 200 or above) must total at least 40 credit hours. Coursework transferred from other colleges and universities may be counted as senior college credit as determined in policy 4.1.18. No credit from two-year colleges may be counted as senior level.
Each candidate for a B.S. or B.A. degree must complete a major field of study. Completion of a second major, a minor, or a second minor is optional unless specified by the student’s major.
At least half (with a minimum of nine) of the credit hours for a minor must be distinct from any credit hours the student counts toward a major within the same department or school. A department or school seeking an exception must provide convincing evidence that the resulting major/minor combination confers a breadth of knowledge that meaningfully exceeds what the major alone would provide. This applies to both first and second majors and minors.
Students graduating from B.A. or B.S. degree programs must meet specific requirements beyond major and other graduation requirements. A student pursuing the B.A. degree will acquire knowledge of a world language as demonstrated by successful completion of LAN 115 (or equivalent).
A student pursuing the B.S. degree will complete a three-hour natural science, mathematics, or technology (SMT) course beyond General Education requirements.
The grade point average for all courses taken at Illinois State University must be 2.0 (C) or higher to confer a baccalaureate degree. In addition, the student must have a grade point average of 2.0 (C) (or higher as required by certain programs) in the courses required in the major, and in the minor if the student has a minor.
A student may not graduate with incomplete grades.
Unless otherwise specified in a specific program, at least 30 of the last 60 credit hours completed toward the baccalaureate degree must be earned at Illinois State University.
Because disciplinary knowledge advances and course content changes, some courses taken seven or more years prior to an advance registration period will not automatically be accepted as prerequisites for other courses. When a department or school determines that applicability of a course will lapse, it will designate this in the prerequisite listing as "taken within x years."
Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, or Indigenous Peoples of the World (AMALI) Requirement
Students graduating from Illinois State University must have successfully completed a course designated as a course in the cultures and traditions of societies or peoples from Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, or Indigenous Peoples of the World. Students may complete this requirement in two ways: successfully completing an ISU course with an AMALI designation or complete an approved course in the Illinois Articulation Initiative General Education Core Curriculum—identified with a "N" designation.
Each student must complete at least one course designated as one focusing on Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access in United States Society (IDEAS). IDEAS designated courses may count both toward this graduation requirement and general education requirements; however, IDEAS courses cannot count toward both the IDEAS graduation requirement and the AMALI graduation requirement. Students can satisfy the IDEAS requirement in three ways: complete an IDEAS-approved course at Illinois State University; complete an approved course in the Illinois Articulation Initiative General Education Core Curriculum—identified with a "D" designation; or complete a baccalaureate-oriented associates degree at an Illinois community college.
A student may count no more than 16 credit hours of professional practice courses (198, 298, 398, 399) toward graduation. Some programs allow fewer than 16 credit hours and will indicate this within the Undergraduate Catalog. A student may count no more than 6 credit hours of independent study (287) credit toward graduation.
A student may not graduate with a disciplinary hold on their record.
There are three ways to complete General Education requirements at Illinois State University.
Undergraduate degrees available at Illinois State University include the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science in Education, Bachelor of Science in Nursing, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Music Education, and Bachelor of Social Work degrees. When applying for graduation, the student indicates the specific degree that they are qualified to receive. Other requirements are specified for each degree below.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Arts degree provides for the acquisition of written and oral communication skills, creative thinking, abilities in the critical analyses of texts, the understanding of cultures, and a working knowledge of social, political, and historical contexts. The degree is typically pursued by those students whose academic emphasis in their major area of study is directed toward the humanities, arts, and selected areas of the social sciences disciplines.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and knowledge of a world language as demonstrated by successful completion of LAN 115 (or the equivalent). A student seeking a B.A. degree takes LAN 115 in place of Quantitative Reasoning.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Science degree provides for the acquisition of oral and written communication skills and the acquisition of analytical skills for examining and solving problems. The degree is typically pursued by those students whose academic emphasis in their major area of study is directed towards the natural sciences, mathematics, statistics, social sciences, or a technological field.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and increased knowledge of the natural sciences, mathematics, statistics, and/or technology. This knowledge is demonstrated by the successful completion of a three-hour course, beyond those required for General Education, selected from an approved list of courses that involve natural sciences, mathematics, statistics, and technology (SMT).
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Science in Education degree encourages acquisition of communication skills, development of analytical skills for examining and solving problems, and the understanding of cultures with special emphasis on application to the art and science of teaching. The degree is typically pursued by students interested in the teaching profession.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and increased knowledge and skills related to professional standards established by the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) through the successful completion of professional education requirements and approved teacher education major requirements.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree provides graduates with knowledge and skills in communication, critical thinking for analyzing and solving problems, and an understanding of the societal changes that impact health care. Courses from the Humanities, Psychology, Physical and Social Sciences, as well as the use of technology, provide a foundation for scientific inquiry and application of nursing knowledge and theories to diverse populations and settings.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and nursing field of study requirements.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Fine Arts degree encourages the acquisition and display of talent in theatre and art, with special emphasis on aesthetic performance and understanding. The degree is typically pursued by individuals interested in the creative and fine arts.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and art or theatre field of study requirements for B.F.A. degree.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Music degree encourages the acquisition and display of talent in music, with special emphasis on aesthetic performance and understanding. This degree is typically pursued by individuals interested in music performance.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and music field of study requirements for B.M. degree.
Statement of Purpose - The Bachelor of Music Education degree encourages the acquisition and display of talent in music, with special emphasis on teaching music. This degree is typically pursued by individuals interested in becoming music teachers.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation; music field of study requirements for B.M.E. degree, and professional education requirements.
Statement of Purpose - The B.S.W. encourages acquisition of communication skills; development of analytical skills for examining and solving problems; and the understanding of social, cultural, and legal structures with special emphasis on application to the profession of social work. The degree is pursued by all undergraduates in the School of Social Work and is recognized as the first professional degree in the field that prepares undergraduate students for beginning generalist social work practice.
Statement of Requirements - General Education requirements, university-wide requirements for graduation, and Social Work major requirements.
Definition Of Major, Minor, Sequence, Concentration, and Certificate
Policy Owner: Academic Senate, University Curriculum Committee
Contact: Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost (309-438-7018)
Revised on: 05/2023