No. She was in a 202 class. "math for engineers" is usually locked behind a course of study or prerequisite classes so people who need those classes to graduate get them. Everything 200 and below is usually tagged as sophomore or below and is intended to be used cross major. 300 and up is when specialized topics start coming up.
You could argue it was "math for engineers" in that Liberal Arts / Social Studies don't require them and only the STEM programs do, I guess. You can graduate with a non STEM degree with just an Algebra course in most Universities in America. And those Algebra courses are usually just high school refreshers if you went to a good high school. Some of the non STEM require Statistics. But even there some schools do "Statistics for STEM majors" and "Statistics for non STEM majors"
You could argue it was "math for engineers" in that Liberal Arts / Social Studies don't require them and only the STEM programs do, I guess. You can graduate with a non STEM degree with just an Algebra course in most Universities in America. And those Algebra courses are usually just high school refreshers if you went to a good high school. Some of the non STEM require Statistics. But even there some schools do "Statistics for STEM majors" and "Statistics for non STEM majors"