Even if your political science or history degree fails to come through when you try to make the case that you should get minimum wage to become best friends with that think tank’s file cabinet, you can at least go home feeling like a jobless intellectual. After all, if nothing else, a liberal arts degree in a humanities or social science field gives students plenty of opportunities to explore classes outside of their specializations (this is especially comforting when that specialization turns out to be useless).
This being the case, it doesn’t make sense to introduce an even broader degree to the good-luck-finding-a-job-after-four-years-even-if-you’re-well-rounded range of Letters and Science curricula. However, though no conclusive decisions have been made regarding its implementation, UW’s Curriculum Council is discussing the possibility of creating a liberal studies major within L&S.
The major would be more general than a traditional humanities or social science degree, and it would require students to take a wide array of classes rather than focus their studies in one field. The justification for such a department, according to L&S Dean Gary Sandefur, would be its benefit to pre-professional students.
Although we theoretically support any major that allows students to maintain their indecisiveness for four years, it seems a waste of money and resources to create an entirely new department to do something that many Letters and Science fields already accomplish. There’s plenty of time to get a degree in legal studies or sociology, branch out to courses in other departments and still graduate in four years.
And let’s be honest, whether you land that administrative assistant (read: copy machine and coffee slave) position right out of college, and unless your dad’s hooking you up with a job at Deloitte or your Nana is Gloria Vanderbilt, you will probably end up applying to grad school sooner or later, which means your degree is already fulfilling its “pre-professional” function.
Further, in a time when we’re already facing plenty of budget cuts, it doesn’t make sense to invest in unnecessary faculty and advising. And half-assing all the student services needed for a new department would obviously be detrimental to both students and graduation rates.
While broadening the range of classes available to students would presumably make it easier to graduate on time, insufficient advising combined with a less-focused curriculum risks decreasing efficiency. For instance, University of Minnesota’s General College, which consisted of a similar general curriculum as the proposed liberal studies program, was dropped in 2005, in part due to low graduation rates.
With that, UW should think twice before introducing something that may end up simply being an arbitrary expansion of what’s already offered. And, in the era of the quarter-life crisis, it might be better for our futures and our psyches to be able to name exactly what subject that diploma was in.





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They should have the right to study whatever they want, just don’t come crying to the school was you get a degree in nothing. These people aren’t getting an education to get a job, they are getting an education for the sake of getting an education. Such “schooling” includes learning about nothing, then applying it to everything.
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Not to worry, once Obamacare and his other socialist programs are in place you won’t have to worry about a thing. The “rich” will be soaked to provide for all your needs.
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Sounds like a good deal for a trustifarian, not so much if you need to earn a living and/or pay school debts.
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heh
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Well, if you can’t get a job with a Liberal Arts degree, you can always teach. There’s a sucker born every minute.
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Yes, in Biddy’s year of humanities, Badger Herald takes a firm stance against such uselessness. How brave of you all. Maybe we should celebrate with a Holocaust denial party? Psh, such minuscule historical facts are for those humanity majors.
You’re studying Poli Sci? GOOD LIKE FINDING A JOB. A History major? HAVE FUN FLIPPING BURGERS. English?! BOY, WHAT A USELESS SPECIALIZATION. Maybe next time you could stick to the valid facts, Herald, and leave such petty attacks out of your writing. I’m sure you’ll all say it was in good humor. Well, I don’t buy it. Your entire piece rings with an unnecessary, conceited tone. You’ve lost a reader today.
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Sounds like perfect preparation to be “The Liberal Arts Layabout”
http://www.slate.com/id/2248156/pagenum/all/#p2
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No kidding - at UW-Whitewater, a business major who received a terrible grade got his test back. Stapled to it was a Burger King application
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good article, i cant believe they’re thinking about adding this major. agreed that it is very difficult for students with these majors to find jobs.
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Since when was the primary purpose of higher education to “get a job”? There is room—indeed, priority should be given—to the kind of liberal education which fosters critical inquiry, good citizenship, and a humane spirit.
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Since the cost got so high that only rich dilettantes (or soon to be debt-ridden fools) could afford higher education just because it “fosters critical inquiry, good citizenship, and a humane spirit”.