Alright I'm not talking to just you here awbuzz but your thought I feel is shared by numerous people on the board and being an educational professional I can't let it go on.
I feel like through no real fault of your own the University systems of the world and whjat actually goes into the degrees have passed you by. Lets use a very specific example of the state we live in. Georgia has the University System of Georgia which provides a lot of rules and regulations for it's member schools (all the public colleges/unis in GA)
One of the main things this means is no matter what USG school or degree program you graduate from you have to satisfy some
core curriculum.
Area Area Name Description Hours Required
A1 Communication Outcomes Courses that address learning outcomes in writing in English At least 6 hours
A2 Quantitative Outcomes Courses that address learning outcomes in quantitative reasoning At least 3 hours
B Institutional Options Courses that address general education learning outcomes of the institution’s choosing At least 3 hours
C Humanities, Fine Arts, and Ethics Courses that address learning outcomes in humanities, fine arts, and ethics At least 6 hours
D Natural Science, Mathematics, and Technology Courses that address learning outcomes in the natural sciences, mathematics, and technology. At least 7 hours. At least 4 of these hours must be in a lab science course.
E Social Sciences Courses that address learning outcomes in the social sciences At least 6 hours
F Lower-Division Major Requirements Lower division courses required by the degree program and courses that are prerequisites to major courses at higher levels. 18 hours
Lets look at The University of North Georgia just as a random example. The link above was directly to the core requirements of the USG and at UNG you can see how those play out at their
Semester Core Requirements. Then you can see the specific classes that UNG offers that satisfies those core areas.
While each state has their own University System they all share about 90% of the requirements to graduate. They definitely all share the need to take some well rounded courses like English, writing and a base level science.
This is the case for all public schools. The check and balance for Private schools are the accreditation programs that monitor private schools. It's different for every school and program but any program worth anything requires well rounded base level courses. Highly religious colleges are the ones that usually try to skirt around it. You can see a list of unaccredited higher ed schools
here.
This idea that English majors do nothing but sit around and braid each other's hair and the only ones who try are the ones taking advanced science/math classes simply is a bad idea to have about the current system.