Authors
Tricia A Seifert, Kathleen M Goodman, Nathan Lindsay, James D Jorgensen, Gregory C Wolniak, Ernest T Pascarella, Charles Blaich
Publication date
2008/3
Journal
Research in Higher Education
Volume
49
Pages
107-125
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Despite scholars’ praise of liberal arts education as a model form, very little research has examined the actual impact of liberal arts education on learning outcomes. The elaborate rhetoric and anecdotal support, long used to advance liberal arts education as the premier type of education with value for all, is no longer sufficient. The practices and conditions that lead to outcomes of a liberally educated student remain an empirical black box. Guided by the work of Pascarella et al. [2005, Liberal arts colleges and liberal arts education: New evidence on impacts. ASHE Higher Education Report, 31(3)], this study examined the extent to which an institutional ethos, that values student–student and student–faculty interaction within a supportive environment characterized by high expectations for developing the intellectual arts, manifests in the lived experiences of students and predicts the development of outcomes …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
TA Seifert, KM Goodman, N Lindsay, JD Jorgensen… - Research in Higher Education, 2008