No.
You aren't forced to go to a college. You choose to go to a college, and you have every opportunity to research that college to see what they will require of you.
The reason why they do it is accreditation. There are colleges that don't have any general ed classes. They often advertise that you can graduate in as little as 18 months. If I was hiring someone for, say, an IT position, and I could choose between someone with an AA from one of those schools, and someone with an AA from a junior college, I would pick the junior college. They had to take general ed, which means that they know how to read, write, speak, and learn at a college level, with a broader focus than the non-accredited school provides.
2007-10-01 14:23:08
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answer #1
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answered by jellybeanchick 7
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I think they should have students take classes that do not relate to their major. Why? Here's two reasons:
1. It expands their knowledge on different subjects
2. It gives them a chance to learn about something that maybe they are interested in but do not know because they never heard of it.
But overall, it prevents the student from becoming too one dimensional.
2007-10-01 13:10:25
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Aprille Ericsson? no person in an anthropology type informed you all cultures are an identical, so i understand you're crammed with s###. additionally, that is important that the folk who layout stuff that customers use have some obscure clue approximately what those purchasers might have an interest in.
2016-10-10 03:23:54
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answer #3
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answered by henze 4
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I don't think so at all. Students need a broad education and also frequently change majors.
2007-10-01 13:43:55
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answer #4
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answered by DrIG 7
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like what? give an example. usually all classes relate in some way.
2007-10-01 13:11:03
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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read your earlier post - you have several answers there.
2007-10-01 13:07:31
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answer #6
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answered by retants 2
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