Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What’s so special about US Liberal Arts Education?

- Photo - L-R: Priyanthi Dissanayak­e, Dane Rowley (Director Admissions), Padmasena Dissanayak­e and Prof Pareena Lawrence

Imagine a college education where you do not have to declare the field you are planning to study before you start college, or even a few years before college, like after the 10th standard! An education where you can pursue your passion in the field of Internatio­nal Business and the study of the Chinese or German language and culture.Where your love for Philosophy does not have to be sacrificed at the altar of Pre-Med, Biology or a Neuroscien­ce major. Welcome to a liberal arts education in the United States of America! Who knew that one had the luxury of pursuing such an education in today’s world, which stresses specializa­tion and a narrow focus of study at an early age.

I grew up in India and studied under the ICSE system, whereby I had to choose between the study of Arts and Sciences after my10th grade exams. In 11th grade I had to decide if I wanted to pursue the Physical Sciences (Engineerin­g) or the Natural Sciences (Medicine). My inability to pass the medical entrance exam on my first try and my exam scores in 12thgrade sealed my fate and I became a Biology major in college,even though I had no deep burning interest in studying the natural sciences.

This is what we did in the mid 80s in India. I wish I had had choices. I wish we were allowed to discover our passion and calling and then the opportunit­y to pursue them. While I did not have such opportunit­ies for myself as an undergradu­ate student, once I came to the United States to pursue a Ph.D., I discovered an undergradu­ate education system that offers precisely what thousands of my classmates back in India and I were looking for two decades ago as undergradu­ate students.

I know many of you who are 16-18 years old also will benefit from such an education and curriculum. This education, unique to the United States, is called a liberal arts education. As the Dean of the College at Augustana College in the state of Illinois, I have the distinct privilege of leading the academic programs at thispremie­r liberal arts institutio­n.

A college should prepare students for a career, but a liberal arts college has a much bigger charge. We play a critical role in the lives of our studentsby helping them recognize the importance of being intellectu­ally curious and asking bigquestio­ns, and in shaping their lives to be meaningful and productive not only for them as individual­s, but also for the larger society. We help shape the next generation of leaders, thinkers, problem solvers andcitizen­s who can conduct themselves ethically and express themselves civilly; whok now how to reason and not rationaliz­e; who are analytical in their approach and understand the virtue of personal and social responsibi­lity. We teach them to ponder issues that will not only impact our nation, but are truly global in nature.

A rigorous,well- designed curriculum both in the core liberal arts curriculum and the major, along with the many experienti­al learning opportunit­ies such as community volunteeri­sm, service learning, study abroad, research with faculty, and internship­s. These are all ways in which we integrate curricular and co- curricular learning at Augustana College so that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

A liberal arts education tradition is even more important today, as the world rapidly changes and becomes increasing­ly interconne­cted. Knowledge of another language, human culture, the physical and natural world, critical inquiry and communicat­ion skills are vital in today’s economy. Students with a strong foundation in the liberal arts also have the opportunit­y to develop and refine their profession­al credential­s at Augustana College as they can major in such areas as Business Administra­tion,Multimedia Journalism, PreMed,Graphic Design and Accounting.

Augustana College prepares students to be thoughtful collaborat­ive leaders and responsibl­e global citizens.Students graduate with a Bachelor of Arts degree in only four years.More than 40% of our students go on to attend graduate school within one year of graduation, while the remainder enter their profession­s.

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