5 Reasons to Attend a Liberal Arts College
Yesterday I ate lunch with a West Coast mover and shaker, whose children went to Yale and whose husband
is an influential and involved Yale alum.
Before the water glasses had even arrived, my lunch guest was suggesting that her children could have been better off not attending Yale. Her children graduated without knowing their professors very well and their pedigree diplomas hadn't helped their job prospects.
She then became animated when she launched into all the reasons why she loved liberal arts colleges. I found myself agreeing with every thing she said. Here are my own reasons why students, whether they are blinded by Ivy League mojo or not, should consider attending a liberal arts college:
1. Student focused. Liberal arts colleges exist to teach undergraduates and only undergrads. That's far different from universities that are designed to focus chiefly on faculty research and graduate students. Star professors at many universities, including the Ivies, never go near undergrads.
2. Small classes. At liberal art college, students can't hide in the back of a large lecture hall because there aren't any. Some introductory courses might have 40 or 50 students, but most are going to be far smaller. Especially for introductory classes, universities tend to herd hundreds of undergrads into lecture halls and often let the teaching assistants deal with these students in smaller settings.
3. Great grad school preparation. It's a fallacy that you have to attend a state flagship or Ivy to enjoy a good shot at grad school. Liberal arts schools dominate the list of the top 10 institutions that produce the most students who ultimately earn doctorates. Per capita, liberal arts colleges produce twice as many student who earn a PhD in science than other institutions. This shouldn't be a surprise. Liberal arts college provide the sort of research experiences that universities often reserve for grad students.
4. Employers value liberal arts. One of the missions of liberal arts colleges is to teach kids how to think, talk and write. Don't all schools do that? Not necessarily. You can graduate from plenty of universities without writing essays or research papers. Who, after all, is going to grade 500 essays? In small class settings, liberal art students are more likely to be required to write papers, give class presentations and collaborate with their classmates and professors.
A new employer survey that the National Association of Colleges and Employers released yesterday indicates that workplaces most value these three skills that a liberal arts eduction can impart:
Bottom line: For all those Ivy worshipers out there, I'd suggest that you at least entertain the possibility that a liberal arts college could be as good as or superior to an Ivy. Even my husband, an Ivy League grad, eventually came around.
Lynn O'Shaughnessy is the author of The College Solution, an Amazon bestseller, and she also writes for TheCollegeSolutionBlog. Follow her on Twitter.
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is an influential and involved Yale alum.Before the water glasses had even arrived, my lunch guest was suggesting that her children could have been better off not attending Yale. Her children graduated without knowing their professors very well and their pedigree diplomas hadn't helped their job prospects.
She then became animated when she launched into all the reasons why she loved liberal arts colleges. I found myself agreeing with every thing she said. Here are my own reasons why students, whether they are blinded by Ivy League mojo or not, should consider attending a liberal arts college:
1. Student focused. Liberal arts colleges exist to teach undergraduates and only undergrads. That's far different from universities that are designed to focus chiefly on faculty research and graduate students. Star professors at many universities, including the Ivies, never go near undergrads.
2. Small classes. At liberal art college, students can't hide in the back of a large lecture hall because there aren't any. Some introductory courses might have 40 or 50 students, but most are going to be far smaller. Especially for introductory classes, universities tend to herd hundreds of undergrads into lecture halls and often let the teaching assistants deal with these students in smaller settings.
3. Great grad school preparation. It's a fallacy that you have to attend a state flagship or Ivy to enjoy a good shot at grad school. Liberal arts schools dominate the list of the top 10 institutions that produce the most students who ultimately earn doctorates. Per capita, liberal arts colleges produce twice as many student who earn a PhD in science than other institutions. This shouldn't be a surprise. Liberal arts college provide the sort of research experiences that universities often reserve for grad students.
4. Employers value liberal arts. One of the missions of liberal arts colleges is to teach kids how to think, talk and write. Don't all schools do that? Not necessarily. You can graduate from plenty of universities without writing essays or research papers. Who, after all, is going to grade 500 essays? In small class settings, liberal art students are more likely to be required to write papers, give class presentations and collaborate with their classmates and professors.
A new employer survey that the National Association of Colleges and Employers released yesterday indicates that workplaces most value these three skills that a liberal arts eduction can impart:
- Communication skills.
- Analytic skills.
- Teamwork skills.
Bottom line: For all those Ivy worshipers out there, I'd suggest that you at least entertain the possibility that a liberal arts college could be as good as or superior to an Ivy. Even my husband, an Ivy League grad, eventually came around.
Lynn O'Shaughnessy is the author of The College Solution, an Amazon bestseller, and she also writes for TheCollegeSolutionBlog. Follow her on Twitter.
Further Reading:
The Best Colleges You've Never Heard Of
Do You Really Need a Business Degree?
What's Wrong with Princeton Review's Best Value College List
Yale image by See-Ming Lee. CC 2.0.Popular on MoneyWatch
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No one is eager to higher people with useless degrees.
Engineering is by far the most marketable major out there. An employer given the choice between a liberal arts student from and Ivy League school, or an engineer from a realistic school, will almost always choose the engineer.
Majors that are meaningful and respected, as well as, earn the most money with a much lower level of schooling; are the majors that are heavy in the STEM categories.
But hey, read about philosophy and sociology, or the ancient times of wherever. Just remember, there are people all over spending their money to learn useful techniques and computational skills you won't find in Freud's theories.
"higher"? Find a dictionary (that useless big book with all those hard words you need to sound out). "from and Ivy Leage school"? "From and" -- does that work for you?
"realistic school" -- and that means ... what?
And, genius, 40% of Fortune 500 CEOs were philosophy majors: http://gerrycramer.com/observations/are-you-on-track-to-becoming-a-fortune-500-ceo/
Why is it that I'm always forced to sit next to people like you on a plane?