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Alive and Well

December 28, 2009

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The liberal arts are higher education’s answer to Broadway, that "fabulous invalid" whose demise is predicted with both certainty and regularity. Claims that the liberal arts are in jeopardy have taken on increased urgency in the current economic climate. As students swell the ranks of community colleges, the presumption is that readily identifiable and employable skills rather than broad and deep learning are the primary focus of their educational ambitions.

But in the case of the liberal arts, conventional wisdom is at odds with what experience and current data suggest. For example, the benchmark freshmen surveys conducted each year by UCLA’s Higher Education Research Institute show an increasing appetite for the kind of educational experience typically associated with the liberal arts. In 2008, for the first time since 1982, more than 50 percent of first year students identified “developing a meaningful philosophy of life” as an important or very important goal of their college experience.

Similarly, the venerable pollster John Zogby has found that a growing segment -- including but not limited to the traditional college age population -- of United States citizens believes living a "meaningful life" is central to the realization of the American dream. And despite dire predictions, enrollment at most liberal arts colleges, including my own, has risen during this difficult economic year.

There are likely two reasons for this gap between conventional wisdom and student decision making. The first is that the separation of liberal arts education from employment is simply unfounded. Employers consistently say that they want to hire graduates who can write and speak clearly, who are innovative and critical thinkers, and who are sophisticated and comfortable with diversity. While not exclusively the domain of liberal education, these traits are certainly cultivated in a liberal arts environment.

The second probable reason for the persistence of the liberal arts is the focus of students themselves. Today’s traditional college age population is more globally-minded, less interested in work as a means only to material success, more willing to find middle ground on issues that typically lead to bi-modal responses (such as abortion), and entirely comfortable with differences in race, gender, and sexual orientation.

In short, today’s young people are balm to the liberal educator’s soul. Ideally, liberal education should literally do just that – it should be education that liberates, that frees the mind from the vagaries and prejudices of received opinion and limited life experiences.

Of course, a reinvigorated focus on liberal education in this light suggests that some of the country club amenities of recent college life may not be particularly essential. Yet material gain is not eschewed in recent findings; it is simply not sufficient. Student expectations for material comfort and the search for meaning are not incompatible, but they may not be attainable in institutions whose resources are strained.

When in doubt, we should follow the example of Bobby Kennedy during the Cuban missile crisis: ignore unreasonable demands and respond to the best of their aspirations. In this case, the liberal arts should provide a model of education that offers both a path to employment and faith in learning for its own sake; a set of useful skills along with the ability to reflect and find value in something beyond oneself. And a campus with older residence halls housing two and three students to a room is not only defensible, it is quite probably a sign of an institution focused on -- well, on education.

To add to the economic anxiety, there is also frequent hand wringing over the fate of the liberal arts due to the growth and proliferation of technology. It was not so long ago that technology was seen as a threat to educational engagement, whether it was through online learning or in society at large as we all “bowled alone.” Yet much of this anxiety evolved from a false dichotomy -- the notion that high tech and high touch are incompatible.

Students see no contradiction between technological sophistication and a personally connected learning community, and they expect both to be a part of their education. The reflection and personal engagement implied by the search for a meaningful life is fully compatible with the Internet age. Students are increasingly sophisticated in online work, while simultaneously they thrive, as much as ever, from strong relationships with faculty. Students expect fully contemporary technological resources, even as they seek the depth and meaning promised by a liberal arts education. The practical and financial challenge is to secure the necessary technological resources and fully integrate them into a sophisticated liberal arts education.

The threat to the liberal arts, if there is one, is not from the recession -- although our resources in higher education are limited. And it is not from a failure to offer marketable skills, for liberal education prepares students for both life and employment. The threat is the enduring challenge of education: to engage eternal truths even as we respond to contemporary issues. It is to ensure that liberal education evolves, that meaningful reflection can employ contemporary technological tools, that cultural exchange should extend beyond the boundaries of western democracies, that understanding identity does not inevitably lead to a chasm of difference. It is to create a liberal education that is both contemporary and enduring, evolving and profound. This is, simply and as always, the promise and the challenge of liberal education.

Mary B. Marcy is provost and vice president of Bard College at Simon’s Rock.

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Comments on Alive and Well

  • The Lifespan of the the Liberal Arts
  • Posted by Jerry Pattengale , Assistant Provost for Scholarship & Public Engagement at Indiana Wesleyan University on December 28, 2009 at 8:30am EST
  • Mary,

    Thanks for this reflective and informative piece and esp. the reminder of the work by Zogby and H.E.R.I. My research colleagues and I also find much in support of your thesis, and we've championed "purpose-guided education" as a result (with data that shows a correlation between a purposeful approach and higher student success gains [including retention]). In the light of today's article about the "de-funding" process in Indiana led by the fiscally conservative governor, the latter data is needed to sustain and enhance such an approach. Though I'm from the humanities (ancient history), after 20 years in administration I'm fully aware that philosophy needs to precede logistics, and both need a fundable strategic model. And, admittedly, that each piece of this model (phil., logistics, budgeting) takes special human and fiscal resources to unpack and synthesize. Some recent books by McGraw-Hill (Why I Teach and The Purpose-Guided Student) present the philosophy and a logistical approach (actual student text), and Jossey-Bass's new book on sophomores (Gardner et al) also addresses the need for purposeful approaches. Kendal/Hunt has The Explorer's Guide and Magna (Teaching Professor series) has a seminar on purpose-guided approaches. Larry Braskamp's helpful introduction to purposeful planning was produced by Anker a few years back, and Christian Smith's work (ND) on emerging adults also proves important. On the other side of the equation (from employers' view) see Phil Gardner's work (MSU) at the Collegiate Employment Research Institute (esp. his annual report). Again, thanks for this piece. jp

  • Self-delusional nonsense
  • Posted by Mike Nesmith , Associate Professor at BSU on December 29, 2009 at 5:00am EST
  • Get real. That data is from 2008 entrants--before the economic crash hit home. Look around the world. Liberal arts, fine arts, humanities and even social science programmes are in retreat, with perpetual funding cuts, early retirement offers (for those well-enough endowed), and cutbacks upon cutbacks. Check out funding for conference travel and participation, especially at public universities. Quote from Bobby Kennedy all you want--whether the Kennedy or the Bush side, with silver spoons and Harvard or Yale available almost no matter what (except getting caught cheating on your Spanish exam did send Teddy packing), those families aren't facing the need to pay off student loans at the end of this cycle. And now that even the U of California system tuition sets a family back $10k per year, per child, well, good luck to the middle class.

    The liberal arts are going the way of the classics, and perhaps it's time to say, about time. With theoretical drivel so far advanced, and the least cooperative faculties imaginable, sometimes the package expiration date arrives.

  • Mike & Jerry
  • Posted by DFS on December 29, 2009 at 1:45pm EST
  • There may indeed be a 'global' retrenchment in the liberal arts, if one reads only the tea leaves.
    Never forget the concomitant power of these Arts, since by definition they may never lose their relevance -- only their proponents.
    It is up to individuals and societies together to keep this in the forefront and relevant.
    It seems that you are presently lacking in the 'individual' sector. Who is in the forefront now, if there is a 'forefront,' and why so?
    These are the issues which are presently lacking. Just as Asimov was the requisite master in relating pure science to others, and therefore did the necessary connection with the 'outside' world, the liberal arts should have several. After all, these Arts are multiple, so at least somewhere in your worlds should be some such compelling communication.
    Where is it?