Originally posted by ItsGavinC
I'm sorry, but that is completely illogical, since inorganic IS highly correlative to "general chemistry".
General chemistry, as studied in the US educational system, for all intents and purposes IS inorganic chemistry.
General chemistry at my school was NOT an introduction to any of the subdivisions you mentioned. Those subdivisions were explained in brief so that a basic knowledge was established for the purposes of pursuing inorganic chemistry, but the course was NOT a general chemistry course.
Since I do not know what school you went to, nor have I seen your syllabus, I don't know if you really took inorganic (or was it general chem).
If you learned the following, then you took Inorganic Chemistry: bonding theory, symmetry and group theory, molecular orbitals, acid-base chemistry (way way more detailed that what's covered in general chem books), crystalline state, coordination chemistry (bonding, structures, electronic spectra, reactions and mechanisms, etc), and some orgometallic
If you learned the following, then you took General/Intro Chemistry: stoichiometry, chemical reactions and solutions, ideal gas laws, thermochem, atomic structure and periodicity, bonding concepts, kinetics, chem equillibrium, acid/base, eletrochem
Again, not saying that you didn't take Inorganic Chemistry (although I have my doubts since Inorganic Chemistry is an upper-division course, similar to Organic, or Physical Chem). I'm just saying there is a difference between General Chemistry and Inorganic Chemistry.
Edit: Another test (thanks to my inorganic prof for this suggestion) - did the course give you the background that will enable you to understand the research of professors who study inorganic chemistry?