University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts

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College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
Motto Leading in Thought and Action
Established 1841
Type Public
Endowment $492 Million (2006)[citation needed]
Dean Terrence J. McDonald
Academic staff 1,372
Admin. staff 2,200
Undergraduates 18,482
Location Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Campus 40 acres (.18 km²)
Nickname LS&A
Website www.lsa.umich.edu
Angell Hall, one of the major buildings housing the College of LS&A

The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LS&A or LSA) is the liberal arts and sciences unit of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S. Established in 1841 with seven students and two teachers, the college is currently the largest unit at U-M in terms of the number of students enrolled. It is located on the university's Central Campus, which it shares with the Ross School of Business, the School of Information, the Law School, and other colleges. It is also home to the University of Michigan Honors Program.

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[edit] Residential College

LS&A Building

The Residential College is a division of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Students commonly refer to the Residential College as "the RC". Dr. Angela D. Dillard is the director of the RC and also a professor in the Department of African-American Studies; 86 faculty and staff at the University are associated with the RC, including nine Academic Advisors and four administrators.

Students in the RC take classes in LS&A as well as specially-designed RC courses, many of which are seminar courses with fewer than fifteen students each. All RC students are required to live in the same residence hall, East Quadrangle, for at least their first two years. Since the RC is a part of the LS&A, all LS&A academic requirements apply to it. In addition to the usual concentrations in LS&A, RC students may choose to pursue five additional concentrations (RC website): "Arts and Ideas in the Humanities", "Creative Writing and Literature", "Drama", "Social Science", and an option for an "Individualized Concentration".

A major requirement for RC participation is intensive language training, which consists of two 8-credit courses similar to language immersion, and one 4-credit readings course. Intensive Japanese at the RC has no reading courses, and the semi-immersion curriculum consists of two 10-credit courses. Other languages offered include Spanish, French, Latin, German, Japanese, and Russian.

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