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The Cheated Undergraduate
by Stanley N. Katz, director of the Princeton
University Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies
In his article, Stanley Katz cites
the latest in a series of reports (AAC&U's Greater
Expectations: A New Vision for Learning as a Nation Goes to
College) to conclude that colleges and universities
are succeeding at giving students practical, pre-professional
training but are failing to deliver the basic tenets of a
liberal education: training students to make value judgments,
think creatively, or learn across a breadth of disciplines.
Katz cites perennial concerns: that faculty are “chosen,
compensated and promoted primarily for their promise as researchers,
not teachers” and that ”[g]eneral or liberal education
is a casualty of [the] trend toward educational utilitarianism”
that has been cultivated in today's knowledge-based
society.
One solution the author suggests
to improve students' learning is to loosen the hold
of academic disciplines, thereby bringing back the brand of
general education tested with critical analysis common in
universities in the mid-twentieth century. He recommends reversing
the more recent “major” trend that forces specialization
too early. Another fix would simply be to “do better
to challenge undergraduates to ask their most urgent questions
about themselves, the world, and the human condition—and
to organize their curriculum around those questions.”
Many colleges and universities have moved in this direction—places
where students design their own majors, for instance—but
“[i]t will require a lot of faculty and student effort
to determine where the fine line between chaos and creative
opportunity lies,” says Katz.
Faculty work loads need to become
more flexible, he writes, and students will require more individually
tailored advising as opposed to lectures and examinations.
Student research should become the primary way undergraduates
learn, Katz believes, as he pictures a university as a library
with “learned pedagogues” as librarians who guide
students to their own discovery of knowledge as part of a
truly liberal education.
To view the entire article, visit
www.wws.princeton.edu/%7Esnkatz/papers/CheatedUndergrad.html.
For Greater Expectations: A
New Vision for Learning as a Nation Goes to College,
visit www.greaterexpectations.org.
The Living Arts: Comparative
and Historical Reflections on Liberal Education by Sheldon
Rothblatt (the latest in AAC&U's Academy in Transition
series) examines the evolution of liberal arts both in this
country and around the world and proposes ways of reinvigorating
liberal education at our colleges and universities. For more
information, visit www.aacu.org/publications/index.cfm.
The
articles featured in AAC&U
Perspectives do not necessarily represent the views
of AAC&U staff, its board of directors, or its membership.
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