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Perspectives on the Value of Liberal Education in the Twenty-first Century

A Regular Series of Articles Published in Liberal Education

About This Series

On the occasion of its ninetieth anniversary in 2005, the Association of American Colleges and Universities launched Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Excellence for Everyone as a Nation Goes to College (LEAP), a ten-year national campaign to champion the value of a liberal education.

In coordination with the LEAP campaign, and in an effort to encourage public dialogue and debate about what really matters in college, this series of articles in AAC&U's Liberal Education presents a broad array of perspectives on the value of liberal education.

For additional information about the LEAP campaign and how to get involved, see www.aacu.org/advocacy.

Articles in the Series

"What Really Matters in College: How Students View and Value Liberal Education" (Liberal Education, Summer/Fall 2005)
By Debra Humphreys and Abigail Davenport

The findings from a series of focus groups, held with high school and college students in four locations in different regions of the country, reveal student attitudes toward liberal education, including the goal of developing values, ethics, and civic responsibility in college.

"Liberal Education for the Twenty-first Century: Business Expectations" (Liberal Education, Spring 2005)
By Roberts T. Jones

A liberal education is the foundation for success in every growing occupation. Employers do not want, and have not advocated for, students prepared for narrow workforce specialties. But is the traditional framework of liberal education calibrated to the demands of the changing world?

"Liberal Education and the Specialist-Rich Workplace" (Liberal Education, Winter 2006)
By Lee Dudka

Most debates on the future of American higher education, and liberal education’s role in it, broach the notion that “education is at a crossroads.” What attracts me, a business consultant working alongside your graduates, is a related puzzle: how do we make liberal learning’s graduates more competitive in today’s workplace?

"Teachable Moments: Advising as Liberal Learning" (Liberal Education, Spring 2006)
By Ned Scott Laff

Many faculty members generally assume that their students understand the purposes of college learning and that they are aware of the assumptions about liberal education embedded in the program configurations designed to advance it. We implicitly believe and sincerely hope that, by following the steps we lay out, our students will develop the habits of heart and mind that characterize the outcomes of a liberal education.


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