Townhall
What
Has Happened to Liberal
Education?
By Linda Chavez
Apr 05, 2013
Liberal
education once stood for
something grand and good: the study of the arts, humanities and
sciences with
the aim of improving the mind through the acquisition of knowledge and
the
pursuit of truth. But some of America's most elite colleges and
universities
have all but abandoned this goal. Instead, many selective schools favor
the
faddish, the politically correct and the dogmatic, all the while
proclaiming
their devotion to promoting "critical thinking" and tolerance.
Conservatives
have complained of
this for decades, with little effect. A slew of books over the past 25
years
have exposed what goes on in the ivory towers, from Allan Bloom's
treatise
"The Closing of the American Mind" to Dinesh D'Souza's polemic
"Illiberal Education." But none had provided a careful, in-depth
study of a single school until the National Association of Scholars
(NAS) this
week released its 360-page report "What Does Bowdoin Teach?"
Bowdoin
College is a small private
"liberal arts" school in Brunswick, Maine. Its admissions standards
are demanding. Bowdoin accepts fewer than one in five who apply (though
the
school admits about a third of black and other "underrepresented"
applicants to satisfy its commitment to "diversity"). The cost of
tuition, room, board and fees for the school's roughly 1,800 students
is hefty:
$56,128 for the 2012-13 academic year, a sum that exceeds the annual
income for
half of all American households.
The
school was founded in 1802 and
boasts a distinguished cast of graduates, including Nathaniel
Hawthorne, Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow and U.S. President Franklin Pierce. But as the
report's
authors…
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