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Published:

By President Robert A. Scott


Garden City, NY, April 19, 2006

The most prestigious colleges are called “liberal arts” institutions. Many universities call themselves “liberal arts” institutionsat the core. Many futurists agree that a liberal arts education is the best preparation for work,citizenship, and family life.They agree that training is about answers — how to — and that liberal education is aboutquestions and imagination. In ancient times, the liberal arts were known as the triviumԻ quadrivium, the seven useful arts, including rhetoric, logic, and quantitativereasoning.

So, what is a “liberal” education? Is it a political leaning? Or is it an approach tolife’s questions and professional challenges that continuously leads to new questions andunderstanding? I think of the liberal arts (and sciences) as liberating – – freeing us fromthe provincial origins of time, place, and a single culture. The goal of liberal education isto teach the ordinary student to become a cultured person and to appreciate other cultures; to develop in students the capacity to assess assumptions and understand the value-ladenchoices that await them as citizens, consumers, decision-makers, and arbiters of ethicalalternatives; to inspire students to contemplate the meaning of life and the role ofreligion, politics, and economics; to help students develop in their capacity to build acivilization compatible with the aspirations of human beings and the limitations of thenatural environment; to apply theory to practical problems.

Liberal education helps students gain the confidence to formulate ideas, takeinitiative, and solve problems; develop skills in language, learning, and leadership; andincrease their abilities for reasoning in different modes. It helps students to appreciatethe pursuits of pure science and the difference between science and technology. It helpsthem fulfill their responsibilities as a citizen in a nation of immigrants. More than anyother form, the liberal arts help us understand nature, the world we meet; culture, theworld we make; and ethics, the systems of thought by which we mediate between thetwo.

With liberal learning as I have defined it, students can improve in clear andgraceful expression in written, oral, and visual communication; organizational ability;tolerance and flexibility; creativity; sensitivity to the concerns of others; and aestheticvalues. Liberal study in this way prepares students to weigh competing arguments anddistinguish between and among fact, faith, and fear as ways of knowing; it frees them andus from ignorance and apathy. Liberal education fosters imagination, which AlbertEinstein said is even more important than knowledge1— although I would add thatknowledge of history, or context, is essential to imagination. Alfred North Whiteheadsaid, “Imagination is not to be divorced from facts: It is a way of illuminating the facts.”2A focus on imagination or “wonder” underscores the importance of the student and notjust the canon.

Liberal learning is the best preparation for what author Daniel Pink calls the“Conceptual Age” — the time beyond the Information Age. To succeed in this age, hesays, we “will have to develop…our right-brain creative aptitudes to supplement…ourleft-brain logical skills.3Pink identifies six aptitudes needed: aesthetic design, story ornarrative, symphony or synthesis, empathy, play, and meaning or purpose.4Theseaptitudes, I submit, are perfectly aligned with the liberal arts.

To fulfill its potential, a liberal education must also involve experience, ininternships, voluntarism, and study abroad. Only then can the useful elements of theliberal arts be realized to their fullest before graduation, by using what is learned in onesetting to define and solve problems in another.

This emphasis on liberal education should not suggest a lessening of importanceon professional education. Indeed, Adelphi began preparing teachers at the beginning —by building professional preparation on a firm foundation of liberal study. That samephilosophy continued with the addition of nursing, social work, psychology, andbusiness, and the expansion of graduate education.

The connections between liberal learning and professional preparation arerevealed by the four key elements defining a profession: “an accepted body ofknowledge, a system for certifying that individuals have mastered that body ofknowledge before they are allowed to practice, commitment to the public good, and anenforceable code of ethics.”5These elements are formed through liberal learning, as heredefined, and the knowledge, skills, abilities, and values we gain from it.

Liberal education is fostered in institutions that serve as curator of the past,creator of the new, and critic of the status quo. Therefore, it is both liberating andconservative. It is about freedom but not of necessity about politics. It is the most usefulfoundation for continued growth as an individual.


Footnotes

1Friedman, Thomas L. The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century. New York:Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005, p. 441.

2Bennis, Warren G. and James O’Toole. “How Business Schools Lost Their Way.” “Harvard BusinessReview,” May 2005; p. 102.

3Cornish, Edward. Finding Success in the “Conceptual Age,” a review of A Whole New Mind, by DanielH. Pink. TheFuturist, September-October 2005, p. 47.

4Cornish, op.cit.

5Bennis and O’Toole, op.cit.


For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu

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