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Do College Students Get Well-Rounded General Education?
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By Faiza Elmasry
Washington, DC
16 November 2009
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Before choosing where to go for college, high school students and their
parents usually spend time shopping around, evaluating various colleges
and universities. Many also consult the college rankings published by a
number of magazines and organizations. Those lists rate schools on such
criteria as tuition, student SAT scores, and teacher to student radio.
This year, a new ranking considered a different criterion.
 | | "What Will They Learn?" compares educational requirements, not academic reputation | What are students at this school expected to
learn? That was the question posed by the American Council of Trustees
and Alumni to 100 colleges and universities across the country. ACTA is
an independent nonprofit dedicated to academic freedom, quality and
accountability. Its president, Anne Neal, says ACTA wanted to compare
educational requirements¡K not academic reputation.
The report
looked at seven key subjects: math, science, composition, U.S. history
or government, economics, foreign languages and literature. Courses in
these key areas of knowledge are necessary for students to be
successful in their careers and life, Neal says
 | Math and science are some of the key areas of knowledge for college students to be successful in their career life
| "Our belief is that it's essential that students
be proficient in reading and writing, that they understand enough math,
science and economics to be able to function in a 21st century society,
that they will be able to communicate in a foreign language since we
live in an increasingly inter-connected world, and that they have a
working knowledge of the history and governing institutions of their
own country that prepares them for informed citizenship," she explains.
Survey results surprising
 | Forty-two of the institutions surveyed by The American Council of Trustees and Alumni received a 'D' or an 'F'
| Neal says they were amazed that many universities
graduate students "with a very patchy, thin education. 42 of the
institutions surveyed required two or fewer of the key subjects. Five
institutions were given an "A" by the ACTA for requiring 6 subjects:
Brooklyn College, Texas A&M, University of Texas-Austin, West Point
and University of Arkansas."
"I'm very proud that the University
of Arkansas has for a long time had a very serious academic
commitment," says Robert Costrell, professor of Education Reform and
Economics at the University of Arkansas. He explains how students could
graduate from some colleges without learning much about the basic areas
the ACTA report highlighted.
Costrell says many selective
universities in the United States have watered down or dropped their
core corricula. "Instead what many universities moved to was a system
where there were different broad categories of courses that a student
could choose to satisfy [requirements]." He believes the choices
students are given in many cases lean more "towards the fluffy
treatment of serious material."
Higher tuition doesn't guarantee better education
"In
fact the higher the tuition, we found the more likely it is that
students are left to devise their own general education," says Anne
Neal. "For example the average tuition and fees at the 11 schools that
require no subjects is $37,700 and by stark comparison, the average
tuition and fees at the 5 schools that require 6 subjects is only
$5,400."
For Richard Wong, Executive Director of the American
School Counselor Association, the new ranking is a valuable resource.
High school guidance counselors often help students sort through the
many colleges they could apply to. However, Wong says, there are other
qualities that should be taken into account when comparing schools.
"What
this ranking focuses on is the more broad, general education courses
rather than the specifics to the major," he says. "There may be some
people, for example, who say if they want an engineering degree, they
want to go to a school that will provide the best education in
engineering and not necessarily requires that the student knows world
history." He believes the ACTA survey should be just one tool among
many used by parents and students to weigh their options.
 | Check out updates of the study at www.whatwilltheylearn.com
| No matter how the ACTA report is used, University
of Arkansas Professor Robert Costrell sees it as an impetus for schools
across the country to re-examine what they teach their students.
"One
thing the colleges could do is to sit down and reconsider what courses
they are actually requiring students to take," he says. "They may also
want to look and study closely what courses students are taking." He
also suggests assessing what students learn "through some form of
examinations or papers."
ACTA's President Anne Neal encourages
families and students to check out updates of the study at
www.whatwilltheylearn.com. Her group, she says, is currently surveying
more colleges, adding more information to the site, and hoping to
discover what college graduates have really learned and how ready they
are to compete in the global marketplace
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