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AYA
Fall Assembly: Second Chance
How
many times have you thought "If I had it to do over again." about
your Bright College Years? Delegates at this fall's AYA Assembly
were given a Blue Book and told to give it a try.
December
2002
by Mark Alden Branch '86
Some
things never change, including Eli procrastination. After the Thursday night dinner in Commons for this fall's Association
of Yale Alumni Assembly,
a number of delegates confessed that they had to go back to their
hotels and get to work. The next morning, they were to meet in small
groups to discuss the four-year courses of study they had devised
for themselves using the current Yale
College Programs of Study (better known as the Blue Book).
But even though they had been mailed the Book and the assignment
weeks before, many of them still had not managed to get it done.
Dean Richard Brodhead
said he couldn't blame them. If real-life students had to come up
with a four-year plan all at once, he said, "people would never
go to college. They would just have breakdowns and join the Marines
instead."
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How
much of a Yale education ought to be prescribed or regulated?
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But as difficult --
and as artificial -- as it was, the exercise had a point. As the
College is in the midst of a year-and-a-half-long review of its
curriculum by a 42-member Committee on Yale College Education (see April), the delegates
were being challenged to think about what a Yale College education
ought to be. The assignment helped frame the Assembly's discussion
of the College review, as did panels and a "Town Hall meeting" featuring
members of the committee, who both solicited the thoughts of alumni
and offered some clues to what the committee may recommend in its
final report, which is due next spring.
The review was first
announced by President Richard Levin in his Tercentennial
address last October. Citing major investments the University
is making in the sciences and other areas, Levin said that "although
we are justly proud of the quality of undergraduate education at
Yale, we must not let this moment pass without considering how undergraduates
might share in the benefits of these University-wide investments."
A month later, Levin
fleshed out the details when he announced the names of the committee
members and gave them their charge. The committee, chaired by Brodhead,
includes faculty, students, and recent alumni. Levin asked them
to consider how to make sure undergraduates can make the most of
Yale's new programs and facilities -- not to mention existing resources
such as the libraries, research centers, graduate and professional
schools, and museums.
Levin appointed four
working groups to look at these questions as they relate to four
different areas: biomedical education, science education for non-science
majors, social sciences and international studies, and arts and
humanities. Since then, the working groups have read, talked, listened,
and debated about ways to accomplish their goals. Brodhead has held
"town meetings" in the residential colleges to hear student voices,
and graduating seniors last spring filled out an extensive survey
about their time at Yale for the committee.
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The
days when people could agree on what specific course of
study constitutes a liberal education are over.
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In a pair of panel discussions
featuring committee members, it emerged that one question occupying
the committee's time is how much of a Yale education ought to be
prescribed or regulated. Are the current distributional requirements effective? Would allowing students to minor in a subject be a good
thing?
Brodhead said that
the days when people could agree on what specific course of study
constitutes a liberal education are over. "In Yale's earliest days, everyone took the same courses and there were no electives," he
said. "But now there are too many things worth knowing for that
to work." Brodhead's skepticism about a more prescriptive course
seemed to be shared by the other committee members who spoke, with
the exception of keynote speaker Donald Brown (see sidebar).
Alumni
who took part in the Blue Book exercise found that even meeting
the current requirements was a challenge, as was choosing
from among some 2,000 courses. Panelists pointed out that students
have an easier time of it, since they have access to more information
about courses than the one-paragraph descriptions in the Blue Book.
Many professors post syllabi and links to reading even before shopping
period begins, and the online Blue Book can be searched by professor,
time, or keyword, making it simpler to find a course on a subject
of interest without knowing what department it is in.
Still, planning a course
of study from scratch can be challenging for an 18-year-old, and
Brodhead said that the most common complaint of last year's graduating
seniors was that the academic advising system is inadequate. Just
what can be done about this is unclear. One alumnus at the Town
Hall meeting suggested that a staff of full-time advisers might
work better than relying on faculty whose knowledge of offerings
outside their own departments is limited.
As the committee is
still far from preparing its final report, the panelists only hinted
at what it might recommend. Among the most interesting ideas mentioned
was to establish teaching centers in writing and quantitative reasoning
modeled after the Center for Language
Study (CLS), which provides support in methods and materials
for the legions of foreign-language instructors in the College.
Such centers could help make teaching in these areas -- regardless
of department -- more consistent in quality, panelists said.
As for the Blue Book exercise, most alumni said they found themselves picking a course
of study similar to what they had chosen years ago, although some
gravitated to newer courses not available in their day, including
newly relevant courses in subjects such as globalization, environmental studies, or Near Eastern languages. "The whole exercise
made me very jealous," said William Nightingale '53, who chose to
major in English again but replaced his ROTC courses with history,
art history, and psychology. "I found the breadth of courses to
be staggering."  |