Source: Alamy
Adaptable: the lessons of the study of the humanities are key to solving problems that technology cannot address
The crucial role of liberal arts in higher education is being lost in universities worldwide, according to the vice-chancellor behind a new global network of colleges.
Christina Slade, head of Bath Spa University, said that global discussion about universities 鈥減rivileges the hard sciences鈥 while the identity of liberal arts is being 鈥渄ownplayed鈥. She added that the UK government鈥檚 interest in vocational areas of study was also putting pressure on the field.
Professor Slade was speaking at the launch last week at Bath Spa of the Global Academy of Liberal Arts, a new network that brings together 16 universities around the world that offer liberal arts programmes.
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Institutions in the network will work on joint teaching programmes, develop collaborative research and, it is hoped, offer opportunities for staff and students to move between them.
Such a network was needed to help develop new thinking and models of collaboration in the liberal arts, Professor Slade said. 鈥淚聽don鈥檛 think we can survive without being international,鈥 she added.
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鈥淭he liberal arts colleges have been under enormous pressure in the US because people say they are expensive and don鈥檛 really pay off in terms of jobs,鈥 she told 糖心Vlog at the event on 5聽June.
While acknowledging the value of science, technology, engineering and mathematics subjects, which have attracted 鈥渆normous鈥 attention in higher education, Professor Slade explained that the liberal arts also had much to offer.
鈥淲e are never going to solve the problems in Syria with bigger guns. We are only going to solve those sorts of problems by using the resources that we have in history and, maybe, psychology,鈥 she added.
Elizabeth Coleman, director of the Center for the Advancement of Public Action at Bennington College in the US, said that the liberal arts were 鈥渦nder pressure everywhere鈥 and added that the 鈥渄eeper problem鈥 was the lack of 鈥渁 language of objectives that is adequate to our responsibilities鈥.
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鈥淲hen [economic advantage] is treated as鈥he objective of an education rather than the outcome of a good education, I聽think we鈥檙e in serious trouble,鈥 she said.
The network includes the European universities of Parma, Stockholm and Utrecht, as well as several North American colleges and institutions in South America, Australia and China.
Carol Long, interim president of one member institution, the State University of New York at Geneseo, said: 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 get with it and change the way that we go about education for our 21st-century students, then a lot of us won鈥檛 be around in another 40 years.鈥
She added: 鈥淲e need to be thinking globally and developing cultural competence鈥ur students, they are eager to work globally but they don鈥檛 always have the tools to do聽so.鈥
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Susan Carson, senior lecturer in creative writing at the Queensland University of Technology, which is also a member of the network, said that the Australian government is 鈥済iving us imperatives about internationalisation, and international links and research, and so we have got to respond鈥.
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