
From the Desk of the President
Liberal Education and the Future of American Schooling
A College President’s Perspective
(Education Week - March 11, 2009)
[Index
of Past Articles by President Dillon]
With a new administration in Washington, Americans can reasonably
expect that aspects of the Bush-era "No Child' legislation
will soon be "Left Behind" but then what?
The challenge facing President Barack Obama and his administration
is to relieve the stringencies of the last eight years educational
policy without reverting to the laxities from which they resulted.
As a country, we must be careful not to leap from one slogan to
the next, but to draw on the practices that have historically served
society best.
With that objective in mind, perhaps it is time to consider the
role liberal education can play in forming Americas young
people.
For nearly four decades, I have taught students at Thomas Aquinas
College in Santa Paula, Calif., first as a member of the teaching
faculty, and for the last 18 years as the colleges president.
During this time, I have witnessed certain trends among our incoming
students that should be familiar to other educators. These trends
point both to successes and to failures of national education policies,
and can serve as a useful, if only partial, guide to reform.
Freshmen at my college arrive quite well prepared in basic skills
and concepts. They have sufficiently strong abilities in vocabulary,
mathematics, and reading comprehension to earn impressive SAT scores,
and they have mastered their classroom material well enough to conquer
the Advanced Placement and subject tests. Still, even among these
high achievers, two common weaknesses must be overcome before further
learning can take place.
The first is that many young people have grown accustomed to ingesting
and repeating informationthe Bill of Rights, the periodic
table, trigonometric identities, or any of a host of other important
pieces of knowledgewithout comprehending the underlying reasons
and causes for their study. Relying on teachers and textbooks as
unquestionable authorities, these students are frequently able to
enunciate a position but unable to defend it. Opinion passes for
knowledge, memorization of data for understanding.
The second shortcoming is in written communication. Too often,
even college-bound high school graduates lack a grasp of the rules
of grammar and the nuances of language and usage. Whether this is
because they were taught that unbridled self-expression is more
important than coherence, or whether they spent too much time on
fill-in-the-bubble tests and too little on actual composition, they
lack the ability to write intelligibly.
How can we address these deficiencies, and instill in our children
the tools, habits, and attitudes that make clear thinking and expression
possible? How can we capture students imaginations, engage
their sense of wonder, and nourish within their hearts a love of
learning? The answer may lie, at least in part, in liberal education.
Unlike career educationthat is, training for a jobliberal
education is undertaken for learnings own sake, with the aim
of coming to an ever-deeper understanding of reality. It examines
the most important questions about nature, man, and God that everyone
faces in every age. The roots of liberal education lie in the wonder
with which children are naturally endowed, and its culmination is
found in the wisdom to which adults aspire.
Socrates famously remarked that "the unexamined life is not
worth living." In liberal education, one finds the beginnings
of the examined life. And I would venture that the best way to conduct
liberal education is through a systematic and dialectical study
of great booksthe works of the finest minds, in various fields,
that the world has ever known.
C.S. Lewis once recommended keeping "the clean sea breeze
of the centuries blowing through our minds" by reading one
old book for every new one. His point was a good one. Reading books
from eras other than our own gives us a broader perspective than
that we can obtain if we are only studying the work of our contemporaries.
It challenges our assumptions, expands our vocabulary, and compels
us to grapple with the unfamiliar.
When these old books are great books, they serve the further purpose
of raising our standards and refining our tastes. Or as the Boston
Globe columnist Alex Beam acknowledged in A Great Idea at
the Time, an account of the great-books fervor that swept the
nation in the mid-20th century, "greatness can spoil one's
appetite for the merely normal."
Far from being obsolete, great books have achieved an enduring
relevance because they contemplate timeless questions and humanity's
place in the world. They are seminal, having seeded the various
disciplines, ideas, and intellectual movements that have come from
them. Familiarity with great books is thus integral to developing
a thorough, organic understanding of any area of inquiry, and even
of the times in which we live.
Great books, by their very nature, demand thoughtful analysis.
When students break down, examine, and account for the arguments
these works contain, they develop the ability to construct, articulate,
and defend positions of their own. Moreover, since clarity of expression
depends in large measure on clarity of thought, providing young
people with a solid grounding in great books, properly taught, would
help them cultivate the habits of both good thinking and lucid composition.
Great books need not be the exclusive province of college students.
There are titles for every age and ability. Even the youngest readers,
who are far from ready for Aristotle, can still delight in Aesop,
just as older students may appreciate Twain well before they can
tackle Tolstoy.
A frequent objection to liberal education is: How can it prepare
our students for life in the "real world"? What good are
a bunch of dusty old tomes in a highly competitive global marketplace?
Such questions remind me of a visit I once took to Monticello,
where I encountered on Thomas Jeffersons bookshelves authors
such as Virgil, Plato, Cicero, Locke, and Ptolemy. If these thinkers
shaped the minds of our countrys founders, then surely they
have something to offer the minds of those who will shape our countrys
future.
Yet one need not look back to Jefferson to appreciate the value
of liberal education. Thomas Aquinas College, for example, offers
students a uniform curriculum consisting solely of great books.
Despite receiving the same undergraduate education, these students
go on to thrive in a widely diverse range of disciplines, including
science, law, religion, government, engineering, medicine, and education.
Far from limiting career options, this kind of education opens
up countless opportunities to our graduates. The liberally educated
person is intellectually nimble enough to prosper in almost any
professional environment. Even in our age of hyperspecialization,
few traits are in higher demand than such versatility.
But the benefits of liberal education far exceed its workplace
applications. As Aristotle observed, if we can order our knowledge,
see the relations among truths, and know truths about the highest
things, we will have wisdom. By focusing on truth and the "highest
things," liberal education nurtures wisdom, which is why it
is invaluable to the future of Americas schools.
After all, the broader purpose of national education policy is
to form responsible citizensthe husbands, wives, mothers,
fathers, friends, and neighbors who will sustain society for future
generations. We can do no better than to foster wisdom within our
schools, and because liberal education elevates the mind, it is
uniquely suited to ennoble the nation.
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