I have recently decided to change my future plans from attending law school to finding a job in the business/finance world. My reasons for doing so are numerous, but my decision is mostly based upon my emerging interest in economics and finance. I may still go to law school eventually, but I am also interested in MBA programs. So, I am currently looking for summer internships in the field to gain experience and training.

I don’t know if any of you have experienced this yet, but I find it to be extremely difficult to market PLS to a potential employer. Let’s be honest: ‘Program of Liberal Studies’ sounds like a joke. The name conveys absolutely no information about the major. It is not clear in what sense it is a ‘program’, nor does the name connate anything positive about what is studied. If anything, PLS sounds like a not-so-rigorous liberal arts major for slackers, which it is not. To avoid the typical liberal-arts stereotypes, I usually write ‘Great Books (History of Philosophy)’ on my resume instead of PLS.

I have come to the conclusion that the major needs a different name; a name that more accurately captures the rigorous curriculum and the broad skills that students acquire. Could it be ‘Honors Humanities’? PLS is essentially an honors program after all, even though it is not marketed as such.

More importantly, I think that my experience is indicative of a larger problem, and that is the feasibility of liberal education for non-academics in times of economic insecurity. One of the many privileges of living in a materially abundant society is that not everyone has to work constantly, and not everyone has to study subjects directly related to work. I think that one of the reasons why liberal education has remained a popular alternative for students in the past fifty years, despite the rise of undergraduate business programs, is that those who pursued non-technical courses of study were still able to obtain gainful employment. However, if the economy does not stabilize and grow in the long-term future (and I have few reasons to think that it will), then I think that we will continue to see an increase in those pursuing technical degrees and a decrease in those studying the humanities.

In order for liberal education and Great Books programs to survive in the future, such programs will have to reinvent themselves and provide students with a more marketable set of skills than ‘reading, writing, and thinking’. Perhaps this would entail having some sort of concentration within PLS, such as political science, economics, or mathematics. I am not sure how this could be done while still remaining faithful to the Great Books, but I do think that liberal education will have to be redefined in order to meet the economic and cultural realities of the 21st century.

Adam

Joey
2/3/2012 12:28:28 pm

I agree with you that the name of PLS should probably be changed to something more substantive and obvious, although I don't know that "Honors Humanities" is better. I guess the "Honors" part communicates a bit of the rigor, but the "Humanities" part doesn't really mean anything to most people. Maybe something like "The Honors Program in History of Literature and Philosophy" would be better, although that's too long.

I also agree that "liberal arts" or "Great Books" programs may have to reinvent themselves in the future, and I like the idea of having a concentration within the program. Anyway, that's what college used to be like for everyone: you had your core classes where you got your liberal arts education, and then you specialized in a "major" on top of that. The problem is that now there is essentially no core; it's all specialization, and then you can take whatever fluff you want to fill in your "distribution requirements." If liberal education is to survive, colleges really need to start returning to a rigorous core - for everyone, not just for a few quirky/overly idealistic individuals.

Also, if colleges will not do this, or feel that they cannot, due to the demands of today's economy, then perhaps high schools will more and more have to pick up the thread. Allan Bloom said that a liberal arts curriculum in college is important because it's the last chance for civilization to reach the kids. Well, if colleges won't do it, maybe high schools can impart a modicum of civilization; then, at least some kids would continue to read the great books and pursue high culture in their own time in college and beyond.

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Lillian
2/5/2012 03:40:27 am

Noo! I totally disagree with you guys! Who needs specialization? Or a different name? I've had no problem marketing our major to employers; once you describe at as a "great books program" (which is my standard response whenever I'm asked what I majored in) and drop a few names like Adam Smith or Wittgenstein, people tend to realize that it was pretty darn rigorous.

My resume proudly declares "Program of Liberal Studies," and it always will.

Guys, remember Newman's Idea of a University. Who needs marketable skills?? That is NOT the point of education, and despite economic insecurity (although 8% job hike, whoo!) our un-specialized major will always be relevant and timeless. To create concentrations is kindof the opposite of the point of PLS.

Just my opinion.

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Joey
2/11/2012 12:30:31 am

^ Like.

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