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Liberal Education, Winter 2002
From the Editor
Bridget Puzon |
American higher education shows vital signs. While we measure,
weigh, survey, assess, and otherwise take the pulse of the
enterprise, signals of education's liveliness--independent
of such study and counting--come from many quarters. At the
Association, we work with campuses that illustrate that message
in a myriad of activities around such topics as general education,
science education for civic engagement, the preparation of
future faculty, and globalization.
Likewise, the message comes to my desk in the language and
preoccupations of campus communities, written by campus leaders
as they strive to offer their students education of high quality.
In each issue of Liberal Education, authors find a place for
their articles where they can express their interests, ideas,
and innovations in collegial exchange. These voices from the
field reflect one strong aspect of academic vitality.
The present issue shows a range of higher education's capacities:
preparing an educated citizenry, dedication to the power of
intellectual life, and social action grounded in learning,
among other things. Moreover, in each issue over the course
of one year, the articles illustrate the vital signs that
are, at the same time, hope for the future.
Of particular note here are both ideas and actions related
to the disasters of September. We see campus ethos concentrated
and made visible in the way academic communities, in an immediate
response, fulfill their multiple roles--ordinarily routines
enacted in the predictable cycle of a semester or academic
year-under pressure of events. We hear their voices recount
activities and gatherings. And we discern the educational
goals driving such campus undertakings. Despite the censoriousness
of some critics of contemporary higher education, there is
much to ground us in confidence as we move into 2002.
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