The Value of a Liberal Arts Education
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The airwaves of contemporary society currently reverberate with extended and extensive noise; however, sadly lacking is sustained and meaningful dialogue. Sound bites have replaced nuanced conversation. The status and value of higher education, specifically a liberal arts education, is one topic on which talking heads regularly pontificate. Interestingly, seldom do pundits differentiate between intrinsic and extrinsic value; ironically, quantitative data is noticeably absent when discussing the extrinsic values of higher education degrees.
The presumed value of a degree in any field other than the traditional liberal arts
carries a storied mythology. The lore asserts that graduates with degrees in the liberal
arts are unemployable, have no marketable skills, and if employed, earn considerably
less than their colleagues with professional degrees. This mythology and its underlying
assumptions fascinate those trained in the liberal arts, since such premises and biases
are precisely what liberal arts majors are trained to assess!
Initially, we might ask why extrinsic value necessarily trumps intrinsic value. From
one vantage, those who truly understand the liberal arts argue that a liberal arts
education ultimately is less about the content studied than the skills acquired to
study that content. The liberal arts historically have engaged topics that are broad
and diverse rather than narrow
and specialized. While the liberal arts associates with well-known discipline areas
(the humanities, the social sciences, the creative arts, and the sciences), more often
than not the skills associated with mastering those various disciplines are equally
highlighted. A liberal arts education fails if after completion one cannot engage
in analytical, evaluative, and critical thinking; problem solve; pose meaningful questions;
produce compelling and reasoned oral and written arguments; and articulate the ethical
implications of the topic studied. We experience daily the challenges and dangers
of living in a global environment painfully deficient in awareness, knowledge, and
sensitivity to the cultural norms, religious worldviews, and values of diverse societies.
The liberal arts disciplines engage such timely and timeless issues. Put differently,
a liberal arts education addresses what it means to be a responsible citizen.
To talk of such intrinsic values to higher education often simply confirms to those
immersed in the extrinsic values of education and focused upon the pressing economic
needs of graduates and their families that advocates of a liberal arts education are
naively unaware of the daily realities of life. Interestingly, those focused primarily
upon the economic value derived from a higher education degree largely ignore data
that counters seeming obvious assumptions (e.g., engineers are more marketable than
historians, a business degree provides the quickest route to corporate executive offices,
etc.). While counterintuitive, recent statistical studies note that graduates with
liberal arts training are not only employable, but they ultimately “out-earn” colleagues
by mid-career. Perhaps more significantly, employers rate liberal arts majors highest
in “meeting employers’ desires and expectations.” Corporate executives, when asked
what they might do differently if they returned to college, state they would take
more liberal arts courses. To quote Anthony Carnevale, director of Georgetown University’s
Center on Education and the Workforce:
Employers consistently say they want to hire people who have a broad knowledge base
and can work together to solve problems, debate, communicate, and think critically
... all skills that liberal arts programs aggressively, and perhaps uniquely, strive
to teach.
Rarely acknowledged in the public arena, although widely known, is that today’s graduates
are entering a rapidly changing world that statistically affirms they will experience
major career changes four
or five times during their professional lifetimes. Virtually unstated is that graduates
with narrow specialization and training struggle far more significantly with these
transitions than liberal arts majors who possess the transportable skills of critical
thinking, nuanced analysis, creative synthesis, collaborative problem solving, and
persuasive oral and written argumentation.
Finally, advocates of a traditional liberal arts education envision a world, nations,
and communities that value not only the skills and intelligence associated with professional
degrees, but degrees that value social intelligence, cultural intelligence, and emotional
intelligence. In a rapidly changing world, societies desperately need educated citizens
who are not only informed but have the skills to interrogate pressing issues, develop
cogent and coherent solutions, and persuasively implement those solutions for social
and ethical good. To state this in the language of Pepperdine, our world needs graduates
whose lives are given to purpose, service, and leadership.
By Rick R. Marrs
Provost