A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts

A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts
Title A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts PDF eBook
Author Wilburn T. Stancil
Publisher
Total Pages 277
Release 2022
Genre EDUCATION
ISBN 9780823295074

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A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts

A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts
Title A Student's Guide to the Liberal Arts PDF eBook
Author Wilburn T. Stancil
Publisher
Total Pages 296
Release 2003
Genre Education
ISBN

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An introduction to the the study of liberal arts for students coming into US-modeled college study for the first time.

A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning

A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning
Title A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning PDF eBook
Author James V. Schall
Publisher Open Road Media
Total Pages 63
Release 2014-07-29
Genre Education
ISBN 1497645069

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A Georgetown professor’s look at the subjects one needs to study for a truly well-rounded education. A Student’s Guide to Liberal Learning is an inviting conversation with a learned scholar about the content of an authentic liberal arts education. It surveys ideas and books central to the tradition of humanistic education that has fundamentally shaped our country and our civilization. This accessible volume argues for an order and integration of knowledge so that meaning might be restored to the haphazard approach to study currently dominating higher education. Freshly conveying the excitement of learning from the acknowledged masters of intellectual life, this guide is also an excellent blueprint for building one’s own library of books that matter.

The Liberal Arts

The Liberal Arts
Title The Liberal Arts PDF eBook
Author Gene C. Fant Jr.
Publisher Crossway
Total Pages 130
Release 2012-05-31
Genre Religion
ISBN 1433531267

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An excellent liberal arts education holds purpose-giving and society-shaping power. But how do we tap into that power and make the most of liberal learning for the glory of God? Professor Gene Fant teaches how to maximize a liberal arts education by outlining its history, criticisms, purposes, and benefits. Ultimately, he shows that liberal learning equips us to become spiritually and intellectually empathetic people who are passionate about serving God, the church, and the world.

A Student's Guide to the Core Curriculum

A Student's Guide to the Core Curriculum
Title A Student's Guide to the Core Curriculum PDF eBook
Author Mark C Henrie
Publisher Open Road Media
Total Pages 116
Release 2014-07-29
Genre Education
ISBN 149764514X

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“This slender volume explains the merits of getting an old-fashioned liberal arts education” (The American Spectator). College students today have tremendous freedom to choose the courses they will take. With such freedom, however, students face a pressing dilemma: How can they choose well? Which courses convey the core of an authentic liberal arts education, transmitting our civilizational inheritance, and which courses are merely passing fads? From the smorgasbord of electives available, how can students achieve a coherent understanding of their world and their place in history? In a series of penetrating essays, A Student’s Guide to the Core Curriculum explains the value of a traditional core of studies in Western civilization and then surveys eight courses available in most American universities which may be taken as electives to acquire such an education. This guide puts “the best” within reach of every student.

The National Review College Guide

The National Review College Guide
Title The National Review College Guide PDF eBook
Author Charles J. Sykes
Publisher Touchstone
Total Pages 276
Release 1993
Genre Education
ISBN

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For prospective college students and their parents, here are the best schools that have not succumbed to "political correctness", those that still uphold the liberal arts tradition of Western civilization, where the famous teachers actually teach the core curriculum courses.

Best Kind of College, The

Best Kind of College, The
Title Best Kind of College, The PDF eBook
Author Susan McWilliams
Publisher SUNY Press
Total Pages 315
Release 2015-07-06
Genre Education
ISBN 1438457715

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Small college professors from across the United States explain why liberal arts institutions remain the gold standard for higher education. The fevered controversy over America’s educational future isn’t simply academic; those who have proposed sweeping reforms include government officials, politicians, foundation officers, think-tank researchers, journalists, media pundits, and university administrators. Drowned out in that noisy debate are the voices of those who actually teach the liberal arts exclusively to undergraduates in our nation’s small liberal arts colleges, or SLACs. The Best Kind of College attempts to rectify that glaring oversight. As an insiders’ “guide” to the liberal arts in its truest form the volume brings together thirty award-winning professors from across the country to convey in various ways some of the virtues, the electricity, and, overall, the importance of the small-seminar, face-to-face approach to education, as typically featured in SLACs. Before we in the United States abandon or compromise our commitment to the liberal arts—oddly enough, precisely at a time when our global competitors are discovering, emulating, and founding American-style SLACs and new liberal arts programs—we need a wake-up call, namely to the fact that the nation’s SLACs provide a time-tested model of educational integrity and success. “At last, some good news about education! This collection brings together essays by professors at small liberal arts colleges, voices largely unheard in the debates raging about higher education. It ranges widely through disciplines and across colleges, taking us into classrooms where we see the creative, inventive kinds of teaching that go on when classes are kept small and professors can interact with students. This book is a welcome corrective to claims that higher education is ‘broken’ and in need of a high-tech fix, a quiet reminder that ‘innovation’ goes on as a matter of course at colleges where teaching is top priority and is kept to human scale.” — Gayle Greene, Scripps College “McWilliams and Seery have achieved something remarkable: they have found a new and interesting way to present the case for the liberal arts model in American education. More than that, they have managed to show the value of, as well as present the argument for, the model. At its best, the book recreates something of the experience of a liberal arts education in microcosm. This is a wonderful, provocative, engaging, and moving book. It is unlikely to be surpassed.” — Simon Stow, author of Republic of Readers? The Literary Turn in Political Thought and Analysis