国际学生入学条件
CWU requires an original, official transcript that shows a complete list of courses taken, grades received, and the number of credits awarded. The transcript should show the date of graduation (if you completed your studies) and any certificates, diplomas, or degrees received. Please note, for some countries, CWU may also need the official certificates and or diplomas of degrees received.
Application processes vary depending on cumulative GPA as outlined below:
Applicants with a 3.00 cumulative GPA or higher who have satisfied the State of Washington CADR requirements will be automatically admitted regardless of ACT or SAT scores. Applicants must still submit ACT or SAT test scores for placement in English and Math courses at CWU. A personal statement is not required.
Applicants with a 2.50-2.99 cumulative GPA who have satisfied the CADR and have a composite ACT score of ≥ 19 or combined SAT score of ≥ 1050 (or > 550 for Math and English) will be automatically admitted. A personal statement is not required.
Applicants with a 2.50-2.99 cumulative GPA who have satisfied the CADR and have a composite ACT score of < 19 or combined SAT score of < 1050 (or < 530 for Math or <560 for English) will be considered through CWU's comprehensive review process. A personal statement may is required.
Applicants with a cumulative GPA of 2.00-2.49 who have satisfied the CADR will be considered through CWU's comprehensive review process. A personal statement is required.
TOEFL score (525 for paper-based, 195 for computer-based, 71 for internet-based)
IELTS score of 6.0
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雅思考试总分
6.0
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:6
- 托福网考总分:71
- 托福笔试总分:525
- 其他语言考试:Duolingo English Test - 100
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
In support of the missions of Central Washington University and the College of Arts and Humanities, the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies prepares students for enlightened, responsible, and productive lives by providing them with the intellectual tools and scholarly background necessary for a deep, critical understanding of human experience. In recognition of the complex fabric of this experience, the mission of our department is to introduce our students to the diversity of philosophical and religious thought and practice. Knowledge of this diversity not only characterizes the well-educated individual, but also is essential for understanding, working, and living in an increasingly pluralistic society. Accordingly, after providing a foundation in the history of ideas, our curriculum has students engage with a variety of perspectives from a broad range of Western and Eastern traditions. These perspectives and traditions are approached through varied learning experiences. Not only do students take lecture-discussion classes, but they also participate in seminar-style conversations, mentored research, and service learning. Through these approaches, our students acquire skills and techniques that enable them to understand and respond thoughtfully to humanity's deepest concerns and to recognize how such concerns impact our personal and professional lives.<br><br>The department offers an undergraduate major and minor in Philosophy, an undergraduate major and minor in Religious Studies as well as a minor in Ethics. To encourage student-faculty interaction, we have a philosophy and religious studies club as well as a local chapter of Phi Sigma Tau, the international philosophy honor society, a local chapter of Theta Alpha Kappa, the international honor society of religious studies, and a pre-law club. The major philosophers and intellectual traditions, Western and non-Western, are analyzed in order to show how philosophy relates directly to problems which thoughtful men and women face in the world today. The Religious Studies program enables students to examine religion objectively as a pervasive phenomenon of human life, providing knowledge of the history, practices, and literature of religious traditions, the varieties of religious world views, and the modes of religious thought and language.
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