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The Resilient Liberal Arts College

July 30, 2009

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There has been much discussion recently over the plight of liberal arts colleges in the new global century. The closure of some institutions, the deep financial challenges faced by others that are tuition-driven, and the fiscal constraints at liberal arts colleges with traditionally large but now battered endowments, all raise questions regarding the future of this sector of higher education. Perhaps more controversially, some observers have identified the addition of professional and vocational programs to the curriculum at liberal arts colleges as a long-term threat to the focused mission and intellectual well-being of these institutions.

But while economic challenges may pose a threat to the viability of some small to medium-sized liberal arts colleges, there is really nothing new about this phenomenon. As historians of higher education have pointed out, the mortality rate for small baccalaureate colleges has been high throughout the nation’s history. From tiny sectarian colleges on the frontier, to campuses where the curriculum was too small, to underfunded institutions that perished with their founders, the story is as varied as it is persistent.

The more troubling claim about the fate of liberal arts colleges, it seems to me, involves the argument that the addition of professional and applied fields including business, engineering, communications, or health and wellness, somehow dilutes the core values of a liberal arts education. This argument appears to center on the notion that the liberal arts experience is largely defined by academic majors, and that only by remaining pure to an arbitrary constellation of allied fields can the uniqueness of the liberal arts college experience be preserved.

I would like to suggest that a different paradigm may be in order, one that acknowledges the simple fact that residential liberal arts colleges have always been attuned to the imperatives of professional and vocational life. Europe’s earliest medieval universities were all about the practical, dare we say “vocational” needs of the universal Roman Catholic Church. When students at Bologna began the study of law in the late 12th century, one suspects they had a modicum of interest in getting on with their careers.

The 17th-century English philosopher John Locke graduated Christ Church College, Oxford in 1656. But he also took a medical degree and employed his training to save the life of his future patron, the political operative Anthony Ashley Cooper, first earl of Shaftesbury. And it was under the employ of Shaftesbury that Locke wrote what would later be published as Two Treatises of Government, a text that proved to be of some value to leaders of the American Revolution like Thomas Jefferson. Locke found no incongruity between his liberal education and his more practical studies. Why do we?

The future of the liberal arts college, in my view, is secure so long as administrators, faculty leaders, and innovative boards continue to reject the antithesis between liberal arts and professional studies. One emerging sector in higher education is doing just that. The Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges (COPLAC) is a consortium of 26 state-supported institutions committed to a high quality, largely residential liberal arts education. One way these colleges are different from some more traditional private liberal arts colleges is that the publics, without reservation, offer majors in business and communications and other fields, while also taking pride in their majors in biology and classics and English.

Admittedly, most of us do not associate liberal arts education with public universities. Much more familiar is the former state teachers’ college, the large land-grants, the comprehensives, and the sprawling Research I campuses. COPLAC colleges and universities have chosen another path. For COPLAC, a quality liberal arts education is about small class size, close faculty-student interaction, an innovative and interdisciplinary common core in the arts and sciences, undergraduate research experiences, senior capstone projects, service learning and community engagement, and a rich and diverse co-curricular life. Moreover, faculty members from professional programs at COPLAC institutions fully support and engage in this unified experience.

Some years ago, I was teaching in an interdisciplinary core humanities program at a COPLAC member institution. At their weekly meeting, the 12-person faculty team was discussing the upcoming common reading. The topic was the Industrial Revolution and the common reading was Marx’s Communist Manifesto.

As a historian, I went into the session thinking that I should lead the discussion. But as things turned out, the most perceptive insights into the text, and how to teach the text, came from a wonderful colleague in management and accountancy. In describing the shock horror that thinkers like Marx must have represented to the self-confident industrialist of the mid-19th century, it was a professor of management who brought the liberal arts experience into sharper focus, both for his colleagues and, more importantly, for his students.

The resiliency of the liberal arts college has been demonstrated across many generations, and with the addition of a growing public liberal arts sector to reaffirm the value of broad-based learning in a small campus setting, the future offers great promise. We should applaud, not criticize, liberal arts colleges that respond to the growing demand for skilled professionals in a variety of applied fields. These graduates will bring to their work the habits of critical inquiry and the integration of knowledge -- both liberal arts outcomes -- that serve to temper the narrow instrumentalism often found at the center of our professional lives.

Bill Spellman is director of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges.

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Comments on The Resilient Liberal Arts College

  • Hear, Hear!
  • Posted by Laura , President at Emerging Technologies Consulting on July 30, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • My own liberal arts education at Rhodes College in Memphis included both philosophy and personal financial management, English literature and computer programming. I credit this combination of the esoteric and the practical with my propensity to bring theory into the very practical world of technology. We need more people in "practical" fields who are thoughtful about their practice. I don't see how a liberal arts college can claim to create well-rounded students if they don't expose them to these kinds of practical classes.

  • Resilient And...Wonderful Liberal Arts Colleges
  • Posted by Sam Minner , Dean at Truman State University on July 30, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • Bill Spellman's thought-provoking and timely article about liberal arts colleges strikes at the very heart of the most critical issues on my campus and I imagine many others. I thank him for so clearly demonstrating that there is a new way---a new paradigm, as he puts it---to think about what does (and should) happen at liberal arts schools, particularly publicly supported schools. I am so weary of the tired and tedious arguments about whether this or that discipline or class is truly a liberal arts class...and worthy of support at a school purporting to embrace a liberal arts mission. These discussions and debates---sometimes arguments--go on and on and I do not think I've ever seen any mind changed during the process. As Spellman suggests, perhaps it is time to reframe the discussion. Focusing on engaging learning experiences which are the hallmarks of a sound liberal education---small classes, close student-faculty interaction, interdisciplinarity, high expectations, community engagement and the like can result in a capacious perspective on the liberal arts and bring many new colleagues and students to the table. Focusing on traditional liberal arts outcomes like the ability to speak and write effectively, the ability to take a position and defend it with good reasons, the ability to appreciate the diversity as well as commonality of the human experience, and many other outcomes can also expand thinking about what a liberal education can and should look like. From my perspective, this paradigm hardly dilutes the liberal mission of a college or university. Indeed, it expands the influence and potential impact of liberal learning to students who would not otherwise have access to liberal education. That is a good thing.Good for the students. Good for the world.
    Spellman suggests that we should applaud liberal arts colleges that embrace this capacious view. I agree...and applaud him for reframing the debate.

  • Singer's Argument
  • Posted by cts on July 30, 2009 at 1:45pm EDT
  • It seems to me that SInger's argument is not simply that any vocational education at the undergraduate level is a bad thing. Rather, I take his point to be that it is a bad thing to reduce liberal education in order to promote vocational education. That is not inconsistent with the view taken by the author of this article.

  • The libera arts education is about "Freedom" and not a "career"
  • Posted by FK , Philosophy at small liberal arts college in PA on July 30, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • I must disagree with the author's claim that the 'practical' has always been an integral part of any liberal arts education. Locke's training in medecine never undermined his study of epistemology, history, and the sciences. A liberal arts education has always been about 'freedom' or preparing students to think for themselves and to investigate their relation to self and world. A vocational or professional education, especially since the 20th century, has been about 'specialization' a narrow focus on expertise in one field of study reducing life's horizons while preparing one for a 'career' or a 'profession' (with lip service about some kind of 'general education'). There is a contradiction between an education for 'freedom' and an education for a 'career'. Liberal arts colleges that are true to their mission cannot accommodate both!

  • Communication and the Liberal Arts
  • Posted by Brian McGee , Chair/Department of Communication at College of Charleston on July 31, 2009 at 12:00am EDT
  • As chair of the largest Department of Communiation at any COPLAC institution, I was surprised by Spellman's assertion that the communication major is professional or vocational. While many institutions treat communication as a professional discipline, other institutions understand communication as a discipline grounded in the trivium and central to the liberal arts. My own department is housed in a School of Humanities and Social Sciences, and rightly so. While I defend the value and importance of the professional majors offered at many liberal arts institutions, I maintain that communication in my unit is a liberal arts major. (The study of communication at my institution dates to 1789 and the original faculty of the College.)

    Spellman is correct in my view when he notes how twentieth-century disciplines in U.S. colleges don't always divide neatly into liberal arts and professional orientations. Departments of English, for example, frequently offer courses in creative writing that are neither more nor less professional in orientation than courses in management.

    Brian McGee, College of Charleston