The high
point in my teaching career was leading sections of Columbia University’s core
curriculum courses. Columbia is among the last bastions of a traditional
private research university offering a prescribed “great books” core to
undergraduates. The core’s centerpieces are close readings of landmarks in
Western literature and classic texts in philosophy, political theory, and
theology.
The New York
Times’ columnist David Brooks joked
about the very similar core that he encountered as a University of Chicago
undergraduate, calling the institution “a Baptist school, where atheist
professors teach Jewish students St. Thomas Aquinas.”
So why write
about a great books core now? Is this nostalgia for the halcyon days of the
past?
As we design
curricula for our pre-professional programs across the University of Texas
System, we are doing our best to break the divide between the humanities, on
the one side, and the professional programs, on the other.
Last week, Inside Higher Ed spoke of the
dramatic drop in enrollments in the liberal arts – something we are seeing at
universities across the country. Part of the answer, I am convinced, is to
make the humanities more relevant to the majors that growing numbers of
students are pursuing.
The Chicago
or Columbia core (among several others I am sure readers will be happy to point
out) epitomizes what many define as a liberal education: Rather than
preparing a student for pre-professional studies (the first step en route to
further study in medicine, engineering, or business) or for a vocation, the
core (ideally) cultivates a student’s aesthetic sensibilities, powers of
ethical reasoning, and historical consciousness, familiarizes students with a “canon,”
and nurtures his or her ability to reckon with issues of meaning, purpose, and
human nature.
A common
intellectual experience by students also builds community, since all students
share a similar frame of reference, and acquire a common set of tools for
communication: oral and written communication skills (since most students must
write weekly), and critical discussion, with prompts to encourage students to
reflect on life’s biggest questions.
As important
as the content that student encounter in a great books core is how the courses
are taught. One doesn’t teach the core, at least as we usually use that
term. The syllabus and course requirements are fixed. Lectures are
verboten. Some test questions are uniformly prescribed.
Nor must the
section leaders hold a terminal degree. Most, in fact, don’t. Some are
grad students; a few others, working professionals. One of my core
colleagues was the former executive editor of The New York Times, Max Frankel.
The term
used to describe the core instructors is preceptor, and the label is
telling. The word “preceptor” originally referred to the head of a
preceptory, a fraternal or military order. A preceptor, then, is less a
teacher or mentor than a senior member of a brotherhood.
A Columbia-
or University of Chicago-style core is not readily transplantable, at least
outside of certain honors colleges. It is subject to continuing criticism
from those who regard it as Eurocentric or as an “amateurish bull session,” due
to the fact that sections are led by non-specialists who do not richly
contextualize the readings.
In fact, the
great books core prides itself on an approach that is pure Martin
Luther: Reading texts without the scaffolding of earlier exegesis.
Students are discouraged from reading secondary sources.
I am not
here to defend the core … but instead to use it as a way to emphasize another
point. My take-away is simple: Many of the richest learning
experiences, especially in the humanities, involve learning, but not structured
teaching (as generally defined). Nor do these experiences depend on a
teacher as authority figure or fount of knowledge.
To teach is
to impart knowledge and skills or to give instruction. To learn, however,
is generally quite different. To be sure, it involves acquiring knowledge and
skills—though this is rarely the product of oral transmission. It is to
construct a framework for understanding and to acquire enduring mastery over a
wide range of content, skills, and habits of mind. It involves synthesis,
interpretation, judgment, and application. It is attained partly by
listening, but also by practice, problem-solving, reflection, and active
learning.
This then
leads to another point --- deconstructing what may be the magic for learners
and teachers (in the best cases) of a great books core program. Or, to put it
another way, what makes Columbia’s or Chicago’s core a transformative
experience? For one thing, it is developmental. It addresses each of
Arthur Chickering’s vectors of identity development: attaining competence, managing
emotions, achieving autonomy, developing mature interpersonal relationships,
forging a personal identity, and developing integrity and a sense of purpose.
It is also
holistic. To use Benjamin Bloom’s categories, it speaks to three
distinctive domains: The cognitive (which includes knowledge and the
ability to apply, analyze, synthesize, generalize, and evaluate); the affective
(which includes a capacity to monitor, evaluate, and organize one’s emotional
responses); and psycho-motor (which, for Bloom, not only includes certain
physical skills and proficiencies but also perception, observation, and
mindsets).
In addition,
such an experience is integrative. Disciplinary and genre boundaries –
literature, history, philosophy, political science, and religion – are deliberately
ignored.
Then, too,
it is immersive. It purposively occupies a disproportionate share of a
student’s lower-division experience. It isn’t intended to be one course
out of many.
What it
doesn’t involve is the mere transmission of knowledge.
The key
question is whether we can take the elements that the core does well and apply
these to other classes or academic programs. In short, can we separate the
container from the content? For many, the magic of the core lies in its
content. But I’d like to suggest that much of the magic lies in the
approach, which is developmental, holistic, integrative, immersive, and
learner-centered.
So let’s
move beyond the debate of “to core or not to core,” and recognize that this is
the wrong question. We need to step back and think about curricular
design. There is a tendency to become trapped in a crude divide between
pre-professional programs and the liberal arts, when instead we might ask how
the liberal arts might contribute to the formation of a well-rounded,
humanistic professional identity.
How, then,
can the example of the great books core inform innovative approaches to
curricular design and pedagogy? We need to architect experiences that truly do
promote learning along multiple dimensions. We should embrace the idea
that all learning is developmental, necessarily involving reversals, setbacks,
and forgetting as students move along a path toward enduring mastery. We should
also recognize that much of the most lasting learning comes when students teach
themselves, individually and as members of a team. Nor should we look askance
at the idea of the faculty member as a scaffold rather than as a lecturer.
After all,
physicians need to know about narrative medicine, the history of medicine and
public health, the medical humanities, and medical ethics. These aren’t
add-ons; they are essential attributes of a professional identity.
Wouldn’t
engineers benefit not merely from the history of technology, but from expertise
in design and professional ethics and the nature of creativity and innovation?
Humanists,
if they cared, could speak to those issues.
Steven
Mintz is Executive Director of the University of Texas System's Institute for
Transformational Learning and Professor of History at the University of Texas
at Austin. Harvard University Press just published his latest book, The Prime of Life: A History of Modern
Adulthood.
Source | https://www.insidehighered.com/
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