Yesterday a number of Sunday papers carried this column by a UConn professor who also writes for the Hartford Courant. Just by chance, Prof. Barreca addresses the topic we've been discussing in this thread: why should colleges continue to teach the humanities?
Because of the exorbitant costs of higher education, many students and parents primarily consider the "R.O.I" (that old racetrack abbreviation meaning "return on investment.") Increasingly, undergraduates are choosing "practical" fields for their majors, perhaps to the detriment to the ideal of a what an education is supposed to mean. It's not about education any more; it's all about job training.
To her credit, Gina Barreca takes issue with this trend with her highly persuasive article in which she states
That people of every economic class should have access to and learn about culture is a point well-taken. For the hundreds of angry shouts railing against "elitism" in the arts, there may be only one quiet voice who champions art for everyone, in a way making "elitism" universal (One of these voices belongs to Earl Shorris, the focus of "Escaping the Surround of Force," a much-earlier LitNet thread.)Of course we want our children to find useful and profitable work when they graduate from college, if indeed they are fortunate enough to have been able to attend one, but we also need to remember that a real education is not simply the acquisition of a set of skills. Each of us, regardless of birth or class, deserves to be part of the larger conversation that culture provides.
Prof. Barreca also believes that culture-- not math and science-- is a force to unite people from disparate walks of life:
Ever listen to what the people who really run things discuss? CEOs, CFOs, politicians from all parties, ? songwriters, engineers, surgeons, museum curators and producers of non-reality-based television programming? They don’t talk about work. . .They talk about books, films, art, music and poetry. . .
And there’s another reason to study poetry: As one honest friend declared, the study of literature can be justified by the fact that nobody ever charmed a girl by reciting an equation.
The article concludes with a warning to Academia against the harmful effects of dismissing arts and the humanities, such as shortchanging students the full benefit of a good education:
Needless to say, yours fooly agrees completely. How about you?Public universities are in particular danger of contorting and, at their worst moments, crippling their student body if they define themselves as simply a way for students to get better jobs. In such a caged context, colleges are in danger of becoming service institutions: We will train the Workers of the World, sure — only we won’t give them anything in the humanities to unite them, inspire them, sensitize them or enlighten them.
http://azstarnet.com/ap/commentary/g...347940b8d.html


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