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An Introduction to the Liberal Arts
The Individual and the Community

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     Overview

Introduction to the Liberal Arts will begin to define what is unique and valuable about a small, liberal arts college like Monmouth College. The goal of the course is vast, challenging, and even inspired: to expose new college students to the life of the mind.  Many college students nationwide cite getting a better job as their first reason for attending college and there is no doubt that a good education can be the first step to a comfortable income.  A liberal arts education, however, offers much more.  After all, a good income is only the means to an end: a good life.  Your years at Monmouth College can prepare you to make the best choices in your personal and professional life--and within the public arena as well.  By your exposure to the best ideas, texts, and minds, your life is more engaged, more thoughtful, and more conscious.  Critical thinking, aesthetic appreciation, communication skills, cultural understanding: these and more are the foundations of the liberal arts education.  These are also the abilities of the informed citizen, the thoughtful parent, and the ethical employee/ employer.

Exemplary Lives” is the theme for Introduction to the Liberal Arts. We will examine how individuals and groups have discovered and defined meaning in their lives and the lives of others through the choices that they have made. How do people have an impact on their world?  How do they overcome obstacles to accomplish great tasks?  How do they survive tragic events, and come to inspire the rest of us?  Exemplary may refer to someone famous or relatively unknown; someone in a position of power or someone who struggled against authority; a story with a “happy” ending, or one of ongoing struggles; and it may refer to a specific individual, a group of people working together, or even a fictional character. "Exemplary" probably has some definitions that would surprise you.

This broad topic will allow us to explore a wide variety of topics in the human condition—including how human beings form identities, how we come to know and understand the world, notions of what has value, what consequences our actions and choices have and how we might think about our life’s journey in the context of other’s life’s journeys.  This particular section focuses specifically on the relationships between individuals and their communities: what are one's obligation to one's community?  What are the obligations of a community to those within it--and to those outside of it?

Goals of Introduction to the Liberal Arts

 

Students will be able to:

 1.       Engage in the practice of reading, in order to see books as sources of pleasure as well as knowledge.

           2.       Engage in an effective critical thinking process;

 

           3.       Utilize an effective writing process;

 

           4.       Demonstrate proficient oral engagement and active listening skills;

 

           5.       Explain the distinctiveness and value of a liberal arts education;

 

           6.       Argue for qualities of an “exemplary life.” 

 

 

       

  

 

Upcoming

Convocation

Professor Stacy Cordery will speak about writing biographies on Monday, February 11th.

 

 

"The unexamined life is not worth living" (Socrates).