Lost Horizons
Abstract
Liberal education faces a pivotal moment in American higher education landscape. Not only are students severely underprepared in critical thinking, writing, and quantitative reasoning, but they are lacking in civic engagement and global awareness. This is the sobering conclusion of LEAP (Liberal Education and America’s Promise) report on College Learning for the New Global Century from the American Association of Colleges and Universities. They weave a promising vision for reinventing liberal education and restoring integrity to the undergraduate curriculum at a time when the quality of undergraduate education is declining by international comparisons. Three facets of the LEAP report warrant particular attention. (1) Extending the scope of liberal learning from the conventional general education curriculum in the first two years of college to courses for department majors—liberal education across the curriculum. (2) Identifying what students need to know, i.e., a specific set of outcomes to be mastered by all students. (3) Linking these collegiate outcomes to 21st Century learning standards for elementary and secondary schools, with a progression and continuous evaluation of student performance. Liberal education is reconceptualized within a framework with four sets of learning outcomes: knowledge of human cultures and physical and natural world; intellectual and practical skills; personal and social responsibility, intercultural awareness and ethical reasoning. This report demonstrates the eclipse of horizons and the loss of a moral framework in the wake of the triumph of disengaged rationality, the sanctification of ordinary life, and the suppression of the passions. This study traces the trajectory of these developments and their reflection in the LEAP report. A final section offers a set of recommendations for restoring integrity to American liberal education.