The Liberal Arts: Creating a Citizen for a Community Near You

1510 Words4 Pages

The view of what college is and what the experience of college offers, differ dramatically between an individual and the society he or she lives. College has traditionally been viewed as the place young adults go to find themselves, find their career, and start their adult lives. Some have argued that education has veered too far away from tradition, while others argue that the whole idea of Liberal Education needs to keep evolving to meet the demands of the modern world. Those in favor of change argue for more diversity within the curriculum, such as more non-western world education and feminist thought. However, the traditional educational ideal has not completely vanished. At the majority of colleges in America the Liberal Arts, or General Education, is the core requirement that every student must take regardless of major. A liberal education studies the idea of what it means to be a good human being. The Liberal Arts are important to everyone because it tries to grasp each individual’s uniqueness and find their place in society. These classes aim to challenge students to become better people, better citizens, and overall create a better society. Liberal Arts try to grasp the knowledge and skills humans have used to rationally understand human existence for thousands of years. By creating culturally diverse campuses and studying topics like philosophy; students learn to question life, question society, and find answers to what it means to be a good person. All of these innovations together along with better informed and intelligent students help form societies focused on equality and the future of human civilization.

Traditionally, the Liberal Arts try to explain and question everything that humans have done. A Liberal Arts...

... middle of paper ...

...ks Cited

Glazer-Raymo , Judith. Shattering the Myths: Women in Academe. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins university Press, 1999. Print.

McCarthy, Erin. "Comparative Philosophy and the Liberal Arts: Between and Beyond—Educating to Cultivate Geocitizens." Canadian Review of American Studies 38.2 (2008): 293-309. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 20 Feb. 2011.

Mulcahy, D. G. "What Should It Mean to Have a Liberal Education in the 21st Century?." Curriculum Inquiry 39.3 (2009): 465-486. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 20 Feb. 2011.

Pascarell, Ernest T. “Liberal Arts Colleges and Liberal Arts Education”. ASHE Higher Education Report 31.3. Ed. Kelly Ward. 2005. Wiley Periodicals. Print.

Wolfe, Leslie R. "O Brave New Curriculum: Feminism and the Future of the Liberal Arts." Theory Into Practice 25.4 (1986): 284. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 20 Feb. 2011.

Open Document