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Universities must put their money where their mouths are on liberal arts

Innovative programmes to revive student interest in the humanities are great, but they must be properly funded and staffed, says an academic

Published on
November 2, 2023
Last updated
November 2, 2023
A broken Greek scupture, symbolising the liberal arts
Source: iStock

These days, passionate defenders of the liberal arts find ourselves in a聽difficult position. We聽know our disciplines are in a聽bad way, yet we聽serve institutions concerned more about being seen to聽care about them than to聽actually makes sacrifices for them by聽diverting substantial resources and institutional capital their way.

At my own college, I聽am living amidst one of聽the most prominent examples of聽this: Purdue University鈥檚 .

Concerns about this programme would simply be an intramural issue were it not for the PR聽blitz and concerted efforts to pitch it to other universities. Cornerstone now educates more than 4,000 students a聽year, and because Purdue is so large and known for being exceedingly STEM-centric, the higher education world is paying attention.

The National Endowment for the Humanities and the Teagle Foundation have devoted $7聽million to launching the programme at other colleges and universities. And recently, Melinda Zook, the programme鈥檚 director, published an reporting that Cornerstone is聽鈥渂eing replicated at 60聽other institutions (and counting)鈥.

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So if you and your institution are enquiring about how to reform liberal arts education, Cornerstone is among the first places you鈥檇 look.

In lieu of the standard public speaking and English composition courses, Cornerstone students fulfill their written and oral communication requirements by taking a two-semester sequence of courses in which they write essays and practise public speaking, while engaging with what the programme calls 鈥渢ransformative texts鈥 (loosely equating to the best that has been thought and written, from antiquity to the present). Some stop there, but students wishing to earn a certificate in liberal arts pursue a further three courses in various departments across our college.

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The praise has been, at times, breathless. contends that 鈥渢he Cornerstone classroom is a rehearsal space for democracy [where] students find that the boundaries of race, gender and cultural difference can be crossed by exercising the sympathetic imagination鈥. believes Cornerstone answers the 鈥渜uestion of how to bring more undergraduates back to the liberal arts鈥. In laments that liberal arts courses are often 鈥渟tale, overly dogmatic and uninteresting to students鈥 and offers Cornerstone as 鈥渁聽solution鈥hat not聽only addresses the void in specialised STEM curricula, but promises to revitalise a stagnant liberal arts curriculum鈥.

Cornerstone鈥檚 goals are certainly worth emulating. But, as I聽have learned from watching the programme grow and from talking to dozens of colleagues involved in it, the reality of its delivery is quite messy.

The programme is advertised as offering first-year students a seminar-style engagement with tenure-track professors. However, while the cap of 30 students per class may seem relatively low, it precludes intimate discussions around a聽table. The Conference on College Composition and Communication 鈥 the recognised authority on the teaching of writing at the university level 鈥 a聽cap of聽20 or, ideally,聽15. With double that ideal number, the ability of teachers to offer comments on drafts and final versions of the required three major essays is, to put it charitably, severely hampered.

Moreover, Cornerstone鈥檚 claim to be putting students into the classroom with faculty is also problematic. Alongside the ranks of the tenure-track, its contains a cornucopia of titles that most faculty would struggle to recognise 鈥 assistant teaching professors, professors of teaching, and assistant professors of practice among them. I聽mean no聽disparagement of these fine, hard-working colleagues; indeed, would that they were offered tenure within the programme. But Cornerstone鈥檚 reliance on the precariat suggests that it wants to look like it鈥檚 mimicking the classroom experience of a Swarthmore but without devoting the same financial resources.

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Compounding this concern, many of those non-tenure-track colleagues teach four sections of students in parallel. That would take up far more than a full 40-hour work week by itself. How can such a schedule offer even the bare minimum of the intellectual development needed to be a good teacher?

Finally, in our college are contractually obliged to teach half their courses in Cornerstone. It is right to insist that faculty, regardless of discipline, should have face time with students from across the university. But colleagues from fields that do聽not specialise in textual interpretation (such as anthropology and sociology) report feeling completely unqualified and unprepared to teach speaking and writing.

In practice, this requirement has bred resentment, as those joining Purdue now are being asked to devote half of their teaching careers to transformative texts and imparting the skills of writing and public speaking, while senior, pre-Cornerstone colleagues teach in the programme on a strictly volunteer basis 鈥 or, more often, not聽at聽all.

It doesn鈥檛 have to be this way. The liberal arts have always had the potential to thrive, even at a place like Purdue. Zook proclaims: 鈥淭he days when we could simply lecture in front of the classroom have passed.鈥 But in my experience, the best teachers among us were never doing that. We actively engage our students in the close reading of primary and secondary texts, in justifying their interpretations through essays and discussions, in applying their insights to contemporary problems, and so聽on.

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Cornerstone, as originally conceived, offers one way of manifesting these pedagogical ideals 鈥 but only if its founding principles are properly implemented, rather than being used as window dressing for just another higher education numbers game.

The author is a faculty member in the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University.

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