The humanities crisis
By Andrew Delbanco
Director of American Studies at Columbia University
A striking symmetry is emerging in debates about the future of
higher education around the world. On the one hand, there is
growing concern that the United States and many European countries
are failing to prepare enough university graduates in the fields
driving the twenty-first century "knowledge economy," such as
engineering and information technology. This fear has led to the
narrowing of the concept of education to mean the acquisition of
practical skills.
On the other hand, the worry in some parts of Asia is that young
people entering the work force with strong technical training lack
sufficient experience "thinking outside the box." This fear is
manifesting itself in an incipient effort to expand education to
include the cultivation of feeling and imagination.
Both movements are rooted in economic concerns. In the US, where
most undergraduates bear at least part of the cost of their
university education, political pressure is mounting to provide
incentives like tuition discounts or loan forgiveness to students
of science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (the so-called
STEM fields). Cost-cutting measures, such as compressing
traditional four-year degree programs into three years - thereby
reducing or eliminating elective courses in "impractical" subjects
like literature, philosophy, and fine arts - are also being
discussed.
Meanwhile, in Hong Kong, Singapore, and China, there are calls for
extending university programs so that students can obtain a broad,
liberal education, in the hope that graduates will be more inclined
to experiment and innovate. Hong Kong University, for example, has
extended its undergraduate programs from three years to four.
But such a narrow, economics-based view fails to account for the
larger questions of value that societies worldwide are facing. To
be sure, progress in any field, from commerce and communications to
health and environmental science, will become increasingly
dependent on technological innovation, and thus on the high-order
skills - acquired through intensive technical training - that drive
it.
It is also true, however, that such training does not provide an
adequate foundation for addressing the more abstract, but
profoundly important, questions that ultimately must guide global
policy and decision-making. For example:
How can the imperative of economic development be reconciled with
the need to limit climate change?
What does national sovereignty mean in a world where diseases,
pollutants, and terrorists cross national borders at will?
Are there universal human rights that transcend conflicting claims
of particular cultural traditions?
How should limited resources be distributed in order to provide
opportunity and hope to young people, while treating the elderly
with dignity and respect?
What are a country's obligations to refugees fleeing from
persecution, poverty, or strife elsewhere?
How should we balance individual liberty and collective
security?
In answering such questions, advances in science and technology
(for example, new methods of energy production, surveillance, or
online learning) will have a key role to play. But moral and
ethical questions never yield fully to technical solutions; they
also require an understanding of humanity's social and cultural
heritage. Science can help us to attain the life we want, but it
cannot teach us what kind of life is worth wanting.
In short, each side in the current education debate is half right.
As human affairs become increasingly complex and morally exigent,
future generations will need both scientific and humanistic
learning - and they will need them more than ever.
Fortunately, promising new models for making education more
coherent and capacious are emerging. Yale University and the
National University of Singapore have worked together to establish
Yale-NUS, Singapore's first liberal arts college. Led by a literary
scholar and an astronomer, this new residential college aims to
break down interdisciplinary boundaries and enable students to
learn from one another. Likewise, Quest University in Canada
encourages students to bring both scientific and humanistic
knowledge to bear on today's most pressing problems.
Similar efforts have been underway for years in the US. For
example, North Carolina State University's Benjamin Franklin
Scholars program - a collaboration between the College of
Engineering and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences -
aims "to produce well-rounded professionals who are analytical
problem-solvers, ethical decision-makers, and effective
communicators." Unfortunately, such programs largely lack the
visibility and influence needed to shape educational reform.
It is time to abandon the "either/or" discourse that pits science
against humanities - which the British chemist and novelist C.P.
Snow identified more than a half-century ago as an obstacle to
human progress. It is time to seek out best practices that bridge
this putative divide, and scale them up.
In the important work of adapting educational institutions for the
future, we must not lose sight of their core mission as articulated
in the past. No one has expressed that mission better than Benjamin
Franklin, a man of letters and a scientific innovator, who defined
education as the quest for "true merit."
"True merit," Franklin wrote, consists in "an inclination joined
with an ability to serve mankind, one's country, friends, and
family; which ability is...to be acquired or greatly increased by
true learning; and should, indeed, be the great aim and end of all
learning." This is an aspiration that should be renewed for every
generation.
Copyright: Project Syndicate
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