• Skip to main content
  • Current
  • Home
  • About
    • About Current
    • Masthead
  • Podcasts
  • Blogs
    • The Way of Improvement Leads Home
    • The Arena
  • Reviews
  • 🔎

liberal arts

Steven Mintz: A liberal education is a “distinctively American article of faith”

John Fea   |  October 25, 2022

Here is the University of Houston historian at his Insider Higher Ed blog: No longer does the “simple advice to high schoolers to ‘go to college’” suffice. What one studies and where one studies matter greatly in terms of return […]

What is going on at Iowa State University?

John Fea   |  March 10, 2022

The university is cutting liberal arts and programs. The administration describes it as a “reimagining” of the liberal arts. History is taking one of the hardest hits. Here is Katherine Kealey at Iowa State Daily: Departments were divided up based […]

Grove City College update

John Fea   |  March 1, 2022

We originally covered this story here. Colleen Flaherty gets us up to speed at Inside Higher Education. Grove City College’s Board of Trustees recently said that it had formed a committee to investigate allegations of “mission drift” on campus and […]

What is going on at Grove City College?

John Fea   |  February 14, 2022

Is Grove City College, a conservative Christian liberal arts college in western Pennsylvania, promoting critical race theory? I have no idea. The phrase “critical race theory” has become such a bogeyman in evangelical and conservative circles that it is impossible […]

Will Christian colleges and universities survive?

John Fea   |  January 19, 2022

There is A LOT to consider in Catholic moral philosopher Charles Camosy‘s recent piece at America. Here is a section that got my attention: As institutions’ connections to Christianity become frayed, other ideologies have gained ground. Too often, Christian values […]

Do we need a new university?

John Fea   |  November 8, 2021

I first met Peter Kanelos (albeit very briefly) when he served as Dean of Christ College at Valparaiso University. In 2017, Kanelos left Valpo to become president of St. John’s College, a Great Books college in Annapolis, Maryland. Earlier this […]

Roosevelt Montas’s “heartfelt defense of the Eurocentricity of a Great Books curriculum”

John Fea   |  September 21, 2021

Historian Steve Mintz‘s recent column at Inside Higher Ed reviews Roosevelt Montas‘s forthcoming book Rescuing Socrates: How the Great Books Changed My Life and Why They Matter for a New Generation. Here is a taste: For far too long, he […]

“Anti-critical race theory laws are un-American”

John Fea   |  July 6, 2021

A diverse group of writers–Kmele Foster (libertarian), David French (conservative evangelical), Jason Stanley (Yale philosopher and scholar of propaganda), and Thomas Chatterton Williams (liberal) have weighed-in at The New York Times. We, the authors of this essay, have wide ideological […]

Do Marxists, critical race theorists, and Tucker Carlson have anything in common?

John Fea   |  June 29, 2021

Anne Applebaum is going to catch hell for this column, but she is right. The subtitle of her Atlantic piece reads: “Marxist literary scholars and popularizers of critical race theory have one thing in common with certain GOP commentators: a […]

“They’re 18 years old…and already they’ve decided to devote the rest of their lives to accountancy”

John Fea   |  April 28, 2021

Yesterday I taught Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” in my Created and Called for Community class. This text speaks volumes about the value of a liberal arts education. Today college and universities sell programs. When my daughters visited college campuses […]

“Cultural humility” vs “liberal humility” in the classroom

John Fea   |  April 9, 2021

Baylor University political scientist Elizabeth Corey explains the difference between these two views of education in an excellent piece at National Affairs. I definitely find myself in the “liberal humility” camp (or at least I aspire to such an approach), […]

« Previous Page