Measuring Liberal Arts - Incite at Columbia University
Measuring Liberal Arts
Measuring Liberal Arts sought to explore how students experience a liberal arts education and examine its effects on individuals after graduation, including participation in democratic associations.
Educational institutions have traditionally positioned themselves as central to the cultivation of students’ individual sensibilities, abilities, and practices. The liberal arts education, in particular, encourages a relationship to others, methods for social construction, and skills for participatory readiness. If this is true, one vital social effect of a liberal arts education should be its ability to produce critically engaged, democratic citizens.
Little to no evidence exists to support such a conclusion, however, and interest in liberal arts education is decreasing relative to interest in higher education that advances technological skill acquisition, business preparation, and professional development. The question of the effect of a liberal arts education, then, is of great importance to higher education and democratic participation as a whole.
To address these issues, Incite worked with a novel corpus of text-based school data to develop a multi-dimensional measure of the degree to which American colleges and universities offer a liberal arts education. Following this strategy, we aimed to identify unique aspects of the liberal arts education and explore how this experience influences a wide range of individual-level outcomes later in life.
More Projects
-
go to Covid-19 and Trust in Science
Covid-19 and Trust in ScienceDocumenting the experiences of Post-Covid Syndrome patients in the United States, Brazil, and China. Funded by Meta
-
go to Whole Earth Redux
Whole Earth ReduxA print publication featuring essays and short stories that take an object from the iconic Whole Earth Catalog and excavate its deeper histories. Part of the Left Field Fund
-
go to Apprenticeship and Re-entry
Apprenticeship and Re-entryEvaluating the economic and criminal legal impacts of building trades pre-apprenticeship programs for people returning from incarceration. Funded by Arnold Ventures
-
go to We Be Imagining
We Be ImaginingApplying the Black radical tradition to the development of public interest technology. Funded by the Board of Trustees of the American Assembly