Complex Problem & Enduring Question Courses

First year students are invited to enroll in °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥ College’s innovative Complex Problem and Enduring Question University Core courses. These courses are collaboratively taught by two °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥members from different fields and are designed to engage students in interdisciplinary explorations of topics of critical importance. These include areas such as migration; social inequalities; technological change; compassion and belonging; justice and the common good; and more.

Complex Problem and Enduring Question courses extend inquiry beyond the classroom to labs, Reflection sessions, conversations with outside speakers, and off-campus field visits, creating an intensive shared learning experience for both teachers and students. They exemplify °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥ College’s distinctive approach to Core education by establishing a foundation for students’ intellectual development and preparing them to become engaged, effective world citizens.

Spring 2026 Complex Problem and Enduring Question Courses

Complex Problem Courses

Complex Problem courses are six-credit courses, team-taught by two professors from different disciplines. Students meet multiple days each week for lectures and once per week for lab. Students and °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥also gather for weekly Reflection sessions, in which they integrate the content of the course with their lived experiences. Each paired Complex Problem course fulfills two University Core requirements. Some may fill an additional University Core requirement for Cultural Diversity, through either Difference, Justice and the Common Good (DJCG) or Engaging Difference and Justice (EDJ).

If you have any questions about these courses or how to register, e-mail core@bc.edu.
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Moving Matters: Migration and Transformation Across the Americas

HIST1733 + UNAS1741

â–¶ÌýFulfills History II + 1 Social Science + Cultural Diversity


Exchange and Values: Stories and Measures of Inequality

ECON1503 + ENGL1738

â–¶ÌýFulfills 1 Social Science + Literature + Cultural Diversity


Enduring Question Courses

Enduring Question courses are two linked three-credit courses taught by professors from different disciplines. The same 19 students take both courses. Four times during the semester, students and °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥gather for Reflection sessions, in which they integrate the content of the course with their lived experiences. Each pair of Enduring Question courses fulfills two University Core requirements. Some may fulfill an additional University Core requirement for Cultural Diversity through either Difference, Justice, and the Common Good (DJCG) or Engaging Difference and Justice (EDJ).

If you have any questions about these courses or how to register, e-mail core@bc.edu.
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Revolutionary Media: How Books Changed History (HIST1705)
Revolutionary Media: How Reading Changes Us (ENGL1715)

â–¶ Fulfills History I + Literature


How Sports Explain America: The History of Sports in the United States (HIST1718)
How Sports Explain America: The Sociology of Sports in the United States (SOCY1718)

â–¶ Fulfills History II + 1 Social Science + Cultural Diversity


The Value of Work: Significance through Literature (ENGL1728)
The Value of Work: A Philosophical Examination (PHIL1721)

â–¶ Fulfills Literature + 1 Philosophy


Oppression and Change in the Contemporary United States: Sociocultural and Psychological Perspectives (UNAS1701)
Oppression and Change in the Contemporary United States: Writing as Social Action (ENGL1722)

â–¶ Fulfills 1 Social Science + Writing + Cultural Diversity


Shifting Forms: Political Belonging in Song and Film (POLI1033)
Shifting Forms: Sexuality and Belonging in Modern Literature and Film (ENGL1732)

â–¶ Fulfills 1 Social Science + Literature


War and Peace: History and Literary Truths (HIST1727)
War and Peace: Historical and Literary Experiences (UNAS1715)

â–¶ Fulfills History II + Literature


Creatively Re/Imagining Black Worlds: Black Literature Making Up To Make Real (ENGL1749)
Creatively Re/Imagining Black Worlds: Empathy and the Social Life of Fiction in the African Diaspora (SOCY1233)

â–¶ Fulfills Literature + 1 Social Science + Cultural Diversity


The Medium Shapes the Message: Materials and Technologies of Visual Communication (ARTH1730)
The Medium Shapes the Message: How Materials Get Meaningful in Human Interaction (FORM1730)

â–¶ Fulfills Arts + 1 Social Science + Cultural Diversity


Urban Paradoxes: Histories of Cities, Power, and Environment in the Americas (HIST1736)
Urban Paradoxes: Theories and Practices of City Infrastructures (UNAS1742)

â–¶ Fulfills History II + 1 Social Science + Cultural Diversity


Plants and Power: The History of Colonial Science in the English-Speaking World (HIST1735)
Plants and Power: Reimagining Colonial Science through World Literature in English (ENGL1750)

â–¶ Fulfills History II + Literature + Cultural Diversity









Reflection and Formation

Reflection is a central element of student formation at °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥ College and a fundamental component of the design of Complex Problem and Enduring Question courses. In Reflection sessions, students connect the content of the course toÌý their lives beyond the classroom and to the larger University community. In this way, Reflection is intimately tied to the University Core Curriculum learning goal of teaching students how to “examine their values and experiences and integrate what they learn with the principles that guide their lives.†Ìý

Hands-On, Project-Based Learning

Weekly, 75-minute labs are a distinctive feature of Complex Problem courses that allow students to develop and synthesize disciplinary skills, integrating lecture material with active learning. Students collaborate in groups on hands-on projects that extend the course beyond the walls of the classroom and into the broader community.

Lab sessions in Complex Problem courses may include:

  • A partnership with the City of °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥â€™s Environment Department where students developed plans for inexpensive ways that residents of various neighborhoods could reduce carbon emissions
  • A collaboration with local anti-violence organizations where students helped to develop programming for survivors
  • A podcasting project where students students researched, developed, and recorded a compelling story about climate issues
  • A mural project honoring the founders of #BlackLivesMatter and #MeToo
  • A comprehensive revitalization plan for a °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥ neighborhood impacted by various forms of injustice
  • An urban walk to learn more about tree equity
  • Engineering design projects focused on improved accessibility on the °¬¿ÉÖ±²¥ College campus
  • Case study research and concept mapping of Marine Protected Areas around the world
  • Op-ed writing about ocean and climate change issues


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