How Do Liberal Arts Colleges Compare With Regular Colleges?

This entry was posted by on Sunday, 22 November, 2009

Would going to a liberal arts college make it difficult to get a job that would be easier to get if I had gone to a regular college in America?
Do liberal arts schools have better education in humanities?
How do I decide if I should go to a liberal arts college?

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  1. What subjects are considered liberal arts? - Yahoo! Answers
  2. Dec 15, 2008 ... How do liberal arts colleges compare with regular colleges? How do employers feel about liberal arts college degrees? ...



  3. cech.p65
  4. *Liberal arts colleges. Source: tabulated by the author. At the risk of belaboring the statistics, there is yet another useful way to compare liberal arts colleges with other institutions in terms of their training of Ph.D. ... These experiences differ markedly from the laboratory sections that accompany regular courses.



  5. Microsoft Word - diversity at liberal arts colleges1.doc
  6. How they do this is not clear. Purpose This study examines the nature of student experiences with diversity at liberal arts colleges. Specifically, three questions guide the investigation.



  7. Frequently Asked Questions: Rankings - US News and World Report
  8. Universities where there is a focus on research and that offer several doctoral programs are ranked separately from liberal arts colleges, and master's universities and baccalaureate colleges are compared against other schools ... The purpose of grouping colleges into categories is to compare schools with similar missions.



  9. How Colleges and Students Differ: Liberal Arts Colleges & Research
  10. Smith College and Swarthmore College, for example, offer engineering in addition to their regular liberal arts subjects. But these programs ... Liberal arts colleges provide students with a sound foundation in core disciplines such as English, philosophy, history, psychology, music, physics, and mathematics. They also offer...



  11. Small Liberal Arts Colleges
  12. I have found myself a regular at the Percy L Julian Math and Science Center (Julian) where I will spend hours just reading for classes. ... The nice part about going to one of the best liberal arts colleges is that they teach us how to do a balancing act. I'm actually pretty good with time management. Thanks, DePauw!



  13. New Approaches to Science and Mathematics Teaching at Liberal Arts
  14. The majority selected the state research university with a nationally ranked football team rather than the liberal arts college that created the program. People unfamiliar with four-year liberal arts colleges believe that one studies philosophy and classics at these institutions rather than science or mathematics.



  15. Saint Anselm College - Manchester, New Hampshire/NH - Liberal Arts ...
  16. Saint Anselm is a Benedictine, Catholic, liberal arts college that ... The Stonehill men and the Bridgewater State College men and women are bidding for regular-season ... Tools: Search schools by zip, Compare schools side-by-side ...



  17. Why a Small Liberal Arts College Could Be Your Kid's Best Choice ...
  18. Aug 11, 2003 ... John Seery believes “that liberal arts college education goes largely ... to do things that liberal arts schools nurture: be problem solvers, .... There was a sense of common purpose that you don't get on regular campuses. .... UCLA professor Alexander Astin compared small liberal arts colleges to ...



  19. Hunting for jobs at liberal arts colleges
  20. For liberal arts colleges, you would do well to list all your teaching involvement, including brief descriptions of what you did. For example, "Teaching assistant for Introductory Physics II" is uninformative compared with "Teaching assistant for second semester introductory electricity and magnetism;



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2 Responses to “How Do Liberal Arts Colleges Compare With Regular Colleges?”

  1. barbara c

    I’m not sure what you mean. Most colleges in the US offer liberal arts degrees (That is a Bachelor of Arts) A in one of the liberal arts – history, languages, literature, the arts etc.) and a BS (Bachelor of Science) if you major in one of the sciences. Some award only BAs no matter what you major in. So I’m not sure what you mean by a “regular” college. You can (or at least you used to be able to) do a “liberal arts” degree at MIT! There are colleges that are stronger in certain areas of the humanities or sciences. I would think that the reputation of the college in your field would matter most.
    Could you be more specific about your concerns? Are there specific colleges that you are wondering about? What do you think that you might major in? What do you mean by “regular” vs “liberal arts”
    Would love to help – but that’s all I can do with what you’ve given us.

  2. hpotterf

    I know what you mean. a big university like NYU as compared to the nearby liberal arts college Sarah Lawrence.
    In my experience, it depends. I applied to a few liberal arts schools but I ended up going with U. of Pennsylvania because a-it was a better school, and b-there was a lot more choice in classes. You can find some small colleges that have deals with larger colleges, allowing you to take classes there. Penn has this with Bryn Mawr and Swarthmore, for example. That would be one solution to the problem.
    A liberal arts school does not automatically have a better humanities department. It depends on what you want to study specifically.
    The benefits of a liberal arts college would be a more eccentric, usually artistic, usually very liberal student body. They are also smaller, so small class size and easy to get to know people.
    I would look at websites to help you decide, the college websites I mean. Look for schools you want to go to, not types of schools. If you can, go visit. If you’re attracted to a smaller school with a liberal student body, then a liberal arts school might be better for you. Look for a good school that you like and don’t worry about the rest.


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