The Goals of a Liberal Education
What does it mean to be a liberally educated person? It seems such a
simple question, especially given the frequency with which colleges and
universities genuflect toward this well-worn phrase as the central icon of
their institutional missions. Mantra-like, the words are endlessly
repeated, starting in the glossy admissions brochures that high school
students receive by the hundreds in their mailboxes and continuing right
down to the last tired invocations they hear on commencement day. It would
be surprising indeed if the phrase did not begin to sound at least a
little empty after so much repetition, and surely undergraduates can be
forgiven if they eventually regard liberal education as either a marketing
play or a shibboleth. Yet many of us continue to place great stock in
these words, believing them to describe one of the ultimate goods that a
college or university should serve. So what exactly do we mean by liberal
education, and why do we care so much about it?
In speaking of "liberal" education, we certainly do not mean an
education that indoctrinates students in the values of political
liberalism, at least not in the most obvious sense of the latter phrase.
Rather, we use these words to describe an educational tradition that
celebrates and nurtures human freedom. These days liberal and liberty have
become words so mired in controversy, embraced and reviled as they have
been by the far ends of the political spectrum, that we scarcely know how
to use them without turning them into slogans--but they can hardly be
separated from this educational tradition. Liberal derives from the Latin
liberalis, meaning "of or relating to the liberal arts," which in turn
derives from the Latin word liber, meaning "free." But the word actually
has much deeper roots, being akin to the Old English word leodan, meaning
"to grow," and leod, meaning "people." It is also related to the Greek
word eleutheros, meaning "free," and goes all the way back to the Sanskrit
word rodhati, meaning "one climbs," "one grows." Freedom and growth: here,
surely, are values that lie at the very core of what we mean when we speak
of a liberal education.
Liberal education is built on these values: it aspires to nurture the
growth of human talent in the service of human freedom. So one very simple
answer to my question is that liberally educated people have been
liberated by their education to explore and fulfill the promise of their
own highest talents. But what might an education for human freedom
actually look like? There's the rub. Our current culture wars, our
struggles over educational standards are all ultimately about the concrete
embodiment of abstract values like "freedom" and "growth" in actual
courses and textbooks and curricular requirements. Should students be
forced to take courses in American history, and if so, what should those
courses contain? Should they be forced to learn a foreign language,
encounter a laboratory science, master calculus, study grammar at the
expense of creative writing (or the reverse), read Plato or Shakespeare or
Marx or Darwin? Should they be required to take courses that foster ethnic
and racial tolerance? Even if we agree about the importance of freedom and
growth, we can still disagree quite a lot about which curriculum will best
promote these values. That is why, when we argue about education, we
usually spend less time talking about core values than about formal
standards: what are the subjects that all young people should take to help
them become educated adults?
This is not an easy question. Maybe that is why--in the spirit of E. D.
Hirsch's Cultural Literacy and a thousand college course catalogs-our
answers to it often take the form of lists: lists of mandatory courses,
lists of required readings, lists of essential facts, lists of the hundred
best novels written in English in the twentieth century, and so on and on.
This impulse toward list making has in fact been part of liberal education
for a very long time. In their original medieval incarnation, the "liberal
arts" were required courses, more or less, that every student was supposed
to learn before attaining the status of a "free man." There was nothing
vague about the artis liberalis. They were a very concrete list of seven
subjects: the trivium, which consisted of grammar, logic, and rhetoric;
and the quadrivium, which consisted of arithmetic, geometry, astronomy,
and music. Together, these were the forms of knowledge worthy of a free
man. We should remember the powerful class and gender biases that were
built into this vision of freedom. The "free men" who studied the liberal
arts were male aristocrats; these specialized bodies of knowledge were
status markers that set them apart from "unfree" serfs and peasants, as
well as from the members of other vulgar and ignoble classes. Our modern
sense of liberal education has expanded from this medieval foundation to
include a greater range of human talents and a much more inclusive number
of human beings, holding out at least the dream that everyone might
someday be liberated by an education that stands in the service of human
freedom.
And yet when we try to figure out what this education for human freedom
might look like, we still make lists. We no longer hold up as a required
curriculum the seven artis liberalis of the medieval university; we no
longer expect that the classical nineteenth-century college curriculum in
Greek and Latin is enough to make a person learned. But we do offer plenty
of other complicated lists with which we try to identify the courses and
distribution requirements that constitute a liberal education. Such
requirements vary somewhat from institution to institution, but certain
elements crop up predictably. However complex the curricular tables and
credit formulas may become--and they can get pretty baroque!--more often
than not they include a certain number of total credit hours; a basic
composition course; at least pre-calculus mathematics; some credits in a
foreign language; some credits in the humanities; some credits in the
social sciences; some credits in the natural sciences; and concentrated
study in at least one major discipline.
We have obviously come a long way from the artis liberalis--and yet I
worry that amid all these requirements we may be tempted to forget the
ultimate purpose of this thing we call a liberal education. No matter how
deliberately they may have been hammered out in committee meetings, it's
not clear what these carefully articulated and finely tuned requirements
have to do with human freedom.
And when we try to state the purpose of such requirements, we often
flounder. Here, for instance, is what one institution I know well states
as the "Objects of a Liberal Education": "(1) competency in communication;
(2) competency in using the modes of thought characteristic of the major
areas of knowledge; (3) a knowledge of our basic cultural heritage; (4) a
thorough understanding of at least one subject area." This is the kind of
language one expects from an academic committee, I guess, but it is hardly
a statement that stirs the heart or inspires the soul.
One problem, I think, is that it is much easier to itemize the
requirements of a curriculum than to describe the qualities of the human
beings we would like that curriculum to produce. All the required courses
in the world will fail to give us a liberal education if, in the act of
requiring them, we forget that their purpose is to nurture human freedom
and growth.
I would therefore like to return to my opening question and try to
answer it (since I too find lists irresistible) with a list of my own. My
list consists not of required courses but of personal qualities: the ten
qualities I most admire in the people I know who seem to embody the values
of a liberal education. How does one recognize liberally educated people?
1. They listen and they hear.
This is so simple that it may not seem worth saying, but in our
distracted and over-busy age, I think it's worth declaring that educated
people know how to pay attention--to others and to the world around them.
They work hard to hear what other people say. They can follow an argument,
track logical reasoning, detect illogic, hear the emotions that lie behind
both the logic and the illogic, and ultimately empathize with the person
who is feeling those emotions.
2. They read and they understand.
This too is ridiculously simple to say but very difficult to achieve,
since there are so many ways of reading in our world. Educated people can
appreciate not only the front page of the New York Times but also the arts
section, the sports section, the business section, the science section,
and the editorials. They can gain insight from not only THE AMERICAN
SCHOLAR and the New York Review of Books but also from Scientific
American, the Economist, the National Enquirer, Vogue, and Reader's
Digest. They can enjoy John Milton and John Grisham. But skilled readers
know how to read far more than just words. They are moved by what they see
in a great art museum and what they hear in a concert hall. They recognize
extraordinary athletic achievements; they are engaged by classic and
contemporary works of theater and cinema; they find in television a
valuable window on popular culture. When they wander through a forest or a
wetland or a desert, they can identify the wildlife and interpret the lay
of the land. They can glance at a farmer's field and tell the difference
between soy beans and alfalfa. They recognize fine craftsmanship, whether
by a cabinetmaker or an auto mechanic. And they can surf the World Wide
Web. All of these are ways in which the eyes and the ears are attuned to
the wonders that make up the human and the natural worlds. None of us can
possibly master all these forms of "reading," but educated people should
be competent in many of them and curious about all of them.
3. They can talk with anyone.
Educated people know how to talk. They can give a speech, ask
thoughtful questions, and make people laugh. They can hold a conversation
with a high school dropout or a Nobel laureate, a child or a nursing-home
resident, a factory worker or a corporate president. Moreover, they
participate in such conversations not because they like to talk about
themselves but because they are genuinely interested in others. A friend
of mine says one of the most important things his father ever told him was
that whenever he had a conversation, his job was "to figure out what's so
neat about what the other person does." I cannot imagine a more succinct
description of this critically important quality.
4. They can write clearly and persuasively and movingly.
What goes for talking goes for writing as well: educated people know
the craft of putting words on paper. I'm not talking about parsing a
sentence or composing a paragraph, but about expressing what is in their
minds and hearts so as to teach, persuade, and move the person who reads
their words. I am talking about writing as a form of touching, akin to the
touching that happens in an exhilarating conversation.
5. They can solve a wide variety of puzzles and problems.
The ability to solve puzzles requires many skills, including a basic
comfort with numbers, a familiarity with computers, and the recognition
that many problems that appear to turn on questions of quality can in fact
be reinterpreted as subtle problems of quantity. These are the skills of
the analyst, the manager, the engineer, the critic: the ability to look at
a complicated reality, break it into pieces, and figure out how it works
in order to do practical things in the real world. Part of the challenge
in this, of course, is the ability to put reality back together again
after having broken it into pieces--for only by so doing can we accomplish
practical goals without violating the integrity of the world we are trying
to change.
6. They respect rigor not so much for its own sake but as a way of
seeking truth.
Truly educated people love learning, but they love wisdom more. They
can appreciate a closely reasoned argument without being unduly impressed
by mere logic. They understand that knowledge serves values, and they
strive to put these two--knowledge and values--into constant dialogue with
each other. The ability to recognize true rigor is one of the most
important achievements in any education, but it is worthless, even
dangerous, if it is not placed in the service of some larger vision that
also renders it humane.
7. They practice humility, tolerance, and self-criticism.
This is another way of saying that they can understand the power of
other people's dreams and nightmares as well as their own. They have the
intellectual range and emotional generosity to step outside their own
experiences and prejudices, thereby opening themselves to perspectives
different from their own. From this commitment to tolerance flow all those
aspects of a liberal education that oppose parochialism and celebrate the
wider world: studying foreign languages, learning about the cultures of
distant peoples, exploring the history of long-ago times, discovering the
many ways in which men and women have known the sacred and given names to
their gods. Without such encounters, we cannot learn how much people
differ--and how much they have in common.
8. They understand how to get things done in the world.
In describing the goal of his Rhodes Scholarships, Cecil Rhodes spoke
of trying to identify young people who would spend their lives engaged in
what he called "the world's fight," by which he meant the struggle to
leave the world a better place than they had found it. Learning how to get
things done in the world in order to leave it a better place is surely one
of the most practical and important lessons we can take from our
education. It is fraught with peril because the power to act in the world
can so easily be abused--but we fool ourselves if we think we can avoid
acting, avoid exercising power, avoid joining the world's fight. And so we
study power and struggle to use it wisely and well.
9. They nurture and empower the people around them.
Nothing is more important in tempering the exercise of power and
shaping right action than the recognition that no one ever acts alone.
Liberally educated people understand that they belong to a community whose
prosperity and well-being are crucial to their own, and they help that
community flourish by making the success of others possible. If we speak
of education for freedom, then one of the crucial insights of a liberal
education must be that the freedom of the individual is possible only in a
free community, and vice versa. It is the community that empowers the free
individual, just as it is free individuals who lead and empower the
community. The fulfillment of high talent, the just exercise of power, the
celebration of human diversity: nothing so redeems these things as the
recognition that what seem like personal triumphs are in fact the
achievements of our common humanity.
10. They follow E. M. Forster's injunction from Howard's End: "Only
connect . . ."
More than anything else, being an educated person means being able to
see connections that allow one to make sense of the world and act within
it in creative ways. Every one of the qualities I have described
here--listening, reading, talking, writing, puzzle solving, truth seeking,
seeing through other people's eyes, leading, working in a community--is
finally about connecting. A liberal education is about gaining the power
and the wisdom, the generosity and the freedom to connect.
I believe we should measure our educational system--whether we speak of
grade schools or universities--by how well we succeed in training children
and young adults to aspire to these ten qualities. I believe we should
judge ourselves and our communities by how well we succeed in fostering
and celebrating these qualities in each of us.
But I must offer two caveats. The first is that my original
question-"What does it mean to be a liberally educated person?"--is
misleading, deeply so, because it suggests that one can somehow take a
group of courses, or accumulate a certain number of credits, or undergo an
obligatory set of learning experiences, and emerge liberally educated at
the end of the process. Nothing could be further from the truth. A liberal
education is not something any of us ever achieve; it is not a state.
Rather, it is a way of living in the face of our own ignorance, a way of
groping toward wisdom in full recognition of our own folly, a way of
educating ourselves without any illusion that our educations will ever be
complete.
My second caveat has to do with individualism. It is no accident that
an educational philosophy described as "liberal" is almost always
articulated in terms of the individuals who are supposed to benefit from
its teachings. I have similarly implied that the ten qualities on my list
belong to individual people. I have asserted that liberal education in
particular is about nurturing human freedom--helping young people discover
and hone their talens--and this too sounds as if education exists for the
benefit of individuals.
All this is fair enough, and yet it too is deeply misleading in one
crucial way. Education for human freedom is also education for human
community. The two cannot exist without each other. Each of the qualities
I have described is a craft or a skill or a way of being in the world that
frees us to act with greater knowledge or power. But each of these
qualities also makes us ever more aware of the connections we have with
other people and the rest of creation, and so they remind us of the
obligations we have to use our knowledge and power responsibly. If I am
right that all these qualities are finally about connecting, then we need
to confront one further paradox about liberal education. In the act of
making us free, it also binds us to the communities that gave us our
freedom in the first place; it makes us responsible to those communities
in ways that limit our freedom. In the end, it turns out that liberty is
not about thinking or saying or doing whatever we want. It is about
exercising our freedom in such a way as to make a difference in the world
and make a difference for more than just ourselves.
And so I keep returning to those two words of E. M. Forster's: "Only
connect." I have said that they are as good an answer as any I
know to the question of what it means to be a liberally educated person;
but they are also an equally fine description of that most powerful and
generous form of human connection we call love. I do not mean romantic or
passionate love, but the love that lies at the heart of all the great
religious faiths: not eros, but agape. Liberal education nurtures human
freedom in the service of human community, which is to say that in the end
it celebrates love. Whether we speak of our schools or our universities or
ourselves, I hope we will hold fast to this as our constant practice, in
the full depth and richness of its many meanings: Only connect.
~~~~~~~~
By William Cronon
William Cronon, Frederick Jackson Turner Professor of
History, Geography, and Environmental Studies at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, is the author of Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human
Place in Nature and Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West, which
won the Bancroft Prize in 1992.