Saturday, November 21, 2009

Eight Challenges for Liberal Arts Colleges

I can enumerate eight challenges that liberal arts colleges must face in the near future:

1. Changing demographics:

(a) The number of high school graduates will level off in the next 20 years, so competition for students will be fierce.

(b) College students will be more diverse ethnically and culturally, so the curriculum also must become more diverse.

2. Affordability: Tuition and fees have been rising at higher rates than healthcare, median household income, and the CPI.

3. Dwindling resources and cost containment: Tuition revenue and endowments will level off or decrease in a difficult economy.

4. The value proposition: Colleges must communicate to students and their families that a liberal arts education has great value. See http://jdepaula1.blogspot.com/2009/08/what-is-value-of-liberal-arts-education.html.

5. Assessment of learning outcomes: Colleges must prove to students and employers that a liberal arts education imparts useful skills.

6. The student of the future must learn to think critically, communicate well, and understand science, technology, and global issues.

7. The curriculum of the future must make stronger connections between the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.

8. The curriculum of the future must promote global citizenship and leadership.

The good news for liberal arts Colleges is that the existing curriculum--to the extent that it is possible to generalize--already teaches some essential skills: critical and creative thinking, analytical and quantitative reasoning, effective writing. But these skills are often developed within discipline-centric majors, which by design promote early specialization. Students have few opportunities to explore connections between disciplines, to understand "big issues" by examining multiple perspectives. For example, seldom is an English major--even someone who meets all requirements of a general education program--asked to think critically and creatively about solutions to a complex problem, such as climate change, by synthesizing concepts of economics, chemistry, political science, philosophy. Yet a student who faces and conquers such an intellectual challenge is prepared to articulate the value of a liberal arts education to a prospective employer. More importantly, this student will become an informed citizen with the potential to lead local and global communities.

As Professor Copenhaver stated in http://jdepaula1.blogspot.com/2009/08/what-is-value-of-liberal-arts-education.html, a liberal arts education 'makes a certain kind of good life possible – one that is embedded in relations that provide life with meaning: relations to the past, the world, and to other persons.’ Relations to the past, the world, and to other persons change over time because society, perspectives, and our collective body of knowledge change over time. Therefore, the liberal arts curriculum must change over time as well. So let us renew our commitment to reform by engaging actively in open conversation about the curriculum we want to create for our students. And let us broaden access to this curriculum by making a liberal arts education affordable to all students who want it. This curriculum will be our legacy.