A glance at the current issue of "Peer Review": Teaching the importance of a liberal education
Liberal education is undervalued, but graduate schools can help change that, says Carol Geary Schneider, president of the Association of American Colleges and Universities, which publishes the journal.
"The 20th-century academy did not do a good job of helping the public understand what a liberal education is all about," she writes. "Too often, we insisted that liberal education was valuable for its own sake, with the result that neither the public nor, in many instances, our own graduates could explain how liberal education mattered in the world at large."
While her organization and others remain committed to providing "the advantages of a rigorous, public spirited, and intellectually challenging liberal education to all college students," she writes, those very ideas are coming under increasing pressure from policy makers who "believe that liberal education is a luxury rather than a necessity, and that the right educational focus -- for most students and most of the academy -- is career training and workforce development."
Graduate schools can help the next generation of faculty members by offering courses that deal with liberal education as an approach to undergraduate study, she says. Graduate students should have the opportunity to explore how their disciplines relate to society and to learn to teach intellectual skills.
"If liberal education is to survive this transitional period," she writes, "future faculty will need to leave graduate school with a clear understanding of the larger educational enterprise."
The article, "Changing Practices in Liberal Education: What Future Faculty Need to Know," is online at http://www.aacu-edu.org/peerreview/pr-sp04/pr-sp04feature1.cfm
I'm glad to see this, especially since the Chronicle recently ran a long piece by a professor at Syracuse implying that the ONLY real purpose of going to college was to get a job that paid big bucks. The article's tone toward the value of a liberal education was highly dismissive and condescending; I could hardly believe that someone employed by Syracuse would write such an idotic (to use our preferred spelling) piece.