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General Education

Western Watershed

Learn Broadly.

Think Bodly.

Lead with Purpose.

Western Watershed is Western’s liberal arts experience for curious learners. It helps you connect ideas across disciplines, build real-world skills, and understand your place in a complex world. You will explore how people and the natural environment intersect, practice collaboration, and turn knowledge into action.

Why Western Watershed?

A student looks through a scope on a tripod at golden hour. Pine trees and Taylor River can be seen in the background.

Integrated Learning

Connects science, humanities, social inquiry, and creative expression to real-world questions facing communities and ecosystems.

A creative writing student sits under a tree on Taylor Lawn and writes in her journal

Skills that Transfer

Into any career, including writing, public communication, information literacy, quantitative reasoning, teamwork, and critical thinking.

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Hands-on Experience

That can include service, field work, creative projects, internships, or research.

Teocalli Mountain at sunrise on the Brush Creek Trail with wildflowers.

A Clear Path

From your first semester to a culminating project that showcases how you apply what you learn.

View of the Castles on a rainy day.

Local to Global Perspective

With opportunities to learn from the Gunnison Valley as a living classroom while gaining insight into global systems and cultures.

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Watershed Catalog

See what the Watershed curriculum has to offer!

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How It Works

Western Watershed is designed like a river system that builds flow and momentum:

Headwaters

Introduces you to inquiry, campus resources, and community through discussion, service, workshops, or local field experiences.

Tributaries

Develop core capabilities and multiple ways of knowing. You practice writing, reasoning with data, creative expression, scientific and social inquiry, and humanistic thinking.

Braided Streams

These are flexible flags that you earn along the way in areas such as Advanced Writing, Information Literacy, Public Communication, Local Knowledge, Global Knowledge, Power and Justice, Sustainability Knowledge, and Experiential Learning. Choose from many paths to reach at least five flags.

Delta

A one-credit, upper-division seminar where you collaborate on an interdisciplinary project that addresses a real issue and demonstrates your growth.

A view of the Castles rock formation with a stream in the foreground.
Wildflowers and mountain views at sunrise on top of Mt. Axtell.

Western Watershed Philosophy

The Western Watershed General Education program engages adventurous learners and prepares students for a dynamic world. During their liberal arts experiences, students will discover intersections among academic disciplines and connect classroom learning to the world beyond.
The Western Watershed recognizes that communities, workplaces, and civic institutions are richer when we all contribute unique individual talents, knowledge, and diverse cultural worldviews. Students will become familiar with many skills and modes of inquiry to provide context, purpose, and develop abilities to meet the challenges of the 21st century. In satisfying the Western Watershed requirements, students will better understand their own lives and develop solutions for thriving.

The Western Watershed Experience

What You Will Take With You

What Makes Western Watershed Different

Who's it For?

Pathways

Transfer-Friendly

Outcomes Beyond the Classroom

Ready to Get Started?

Talk with your advisor to plan a Watershed pathway that complements your major and goals. Explore opportunities for service, field experiences, creative work, and research starting in your first semester.