Foreword, by Michael S. Roth
Acknowledgments
Introduction. A Radical Vision for Redesigning Liberal
Education
William Moner, Phillip Motley, and Rebecca Pope-Ruark
Part I. Case Studies
Chapter 1. Problem-Focused Liberal Education in a First-Year
Learning Community at the University of Wisconsin–Green
Bay
Denise S. Bartell, Alison K. Staudinger, and David J. Voelker
Chapter 2. Attending to Local Context, Culture, and Language at
Florida International University
Isis Artze-Vega, Phillip M. Carter, and Heather Russell
Chapter 3. The Experiential Liberal Arts: An Integrative Model for
Twenty-First-Century Education at Northeastern University
Chris W. Gallagher and Uta G. Poiger
Chapter 4. Creating Connections: An Intentional, Integrated Liberal
Education at Connecticut College
Michael Reder and Ann Schenk
Chapter 5. Building a Developmental, Interdisciplinary General
Education Curriculum for the Future: Foundations in the Liberal
Arts at Rollins College
Emily Russell, Susan Rundell Singer, and Toni Strollo Holbrook
Chapter 6. Exploring the Borderlands: Using Interdisciplinarity to
Build Civic Literacy at the College of the Holy Cross
Laurie Ann Britt-Smith
Chapter 7. Redesigning Learning through Multidisciplinary Teaching:
Voices from a Sophomore Core Experience at Lasell University
Michael J. Daley, Dennis A. Frey Jr., and Catherine Zeek
Chapter 8. Intergenerational Partnerships to Support Liberal
Learning Goals at Brown University
Mary C. Wright, Maud S. Mandel, Jessica Metzler, and Christina
Smith
Chapter 9. The Design Thinking Initiative at Smith College
Borjana Mikic
Chapter 10. Immersive Learning in the Studio for Social Innovation
at Elon University
Rebecca Pope-Ruark, William Moner, and Phillip Motley
Chapter 11. Failing Forward: Writing, Design, and Organic
Curricular Change at Georgetown University
Maggie Debelius, Sherry Lee Linkon, and Matthew Pavesich
Chapter 12. Educating Business Leaders for a Better World at George
Mason University
Lisa Gring-Pemble, Anne M. Magro, and Jacquelyn Dively Brown
Chapter 13. Educating for Global Civic Participation and a Career:
German Studies in the Twenty-First Century at Elon University
Scott Windham, Andrea A. Sinn, Kristin Lange, Derek Lackaff,
Anthony Hatcher, Evan A. Gatti, and Janelle Papay Decato
Chapter 14. Pursuing Major Passions: Innovative Minors That Blend
Professional Skills and Liberal Education Values for Civic Pursuits
at Susquehanna University
John Bodinger de Uriarte and Betsy Verhoeven
Part II. Visions for the Future of Liberal Education
Chapter 15. The Future Has Gone Soft on Skills: Why Campuses Should
Be Working Harder to Cement Personal and Social Development with
Learning
Ashley Finley
Chapter 16. Can We Liberate Liberal Education?
Randy Bass
Chapter 17. Aligning Liberal Education for an Age of Inequality
William M. Sullivan
Chapter 18. Slow: Liberal Learning for and in a Fast-Paced
World
Nancy L. Chick and Peter Felten
Chapter 19. Shifting Paradigms: College Admissions as a Lever for
Systemic Change in Liberal Education
Kristína Moss Gudrún Gunnarsdóttir and Meredith Twombly
Chapter 20. Scholartistry: Creativity and the Future of the Liberal
Arts
Michael Shanks and Connie Svabo
Afterword. The Age of Connectedness
Leo Lambert
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Contributors
Index
Redesigning liberal education requires both pragmatic approaches to discover what works and radical visions of what is possible.
William Moner is an assistant professor of communication design at Elon University. Phillip Motley is an associate professor of communications at Elon University. Rebecca Pope-Ruark is a faculty teaching and learning specialist in the Center for Teaching and Learning at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She is the author of Agile Faculty: Practical Strategies for Managing Research, Service, and Teaching.
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