Liberal arts college
A liberal arts college is an institution of higher education found in the United States, offering programs in the liberal arts at the post-secondary level. They encourage — and often require — their students to take a substantial number of classes in topics which may not directly relate to their vocational goals, in an effort to provide a "well-rounded" education. They may be distinguished from colleges offering programs primarily in business, engineering and technology, the trades, the fine arts, theology, or other specialized subjects. Liberal arts colleges have sprung up outside the U.S. as well, such as in The Netherlands and Canada. Liberal arts colleges usually focus on tertiary education leading to a bachelor's degree in a program designed to be completed in four years' worth of study, though some include post-graduate programs. They tend to be relatively small, private, and predominantly residential. As such, they may offer a more uniform student experience than at a larger university with more diffuse course offerings. While they lack the name recognition of larger schools, the top liberal arts colleges are highly selective and compete with elite universities for students. Although private liberal arts colleges tend to be very expensive, there are also a number of state-supported institutions modeled on traditional liberal arts colleges. Some institutions referred to as "liberal arts colleges" are distinguished from universities not so much by a difference in kind, but a difference in size, taking the form of small universities, complete with subsidiary schools dedicated to a particular specialized course of study and offering a limited set of graduate degrees. In this sense, large liberal arts colleges and small private universities occupy similar niches. Furthermore, university units whose faculty and curriculum encompass the traditional liberal arts and pure sciences are frequently labeled "liberal arts colleges." Indeed, some are explicitly named a "College of Liberal Arts," or a variant such as "College of Arts and Letters" or "College of Arts and Sciences" to distinguish them from units focused on the manual arts and applied sciences. Both colloquial and professional references to "liberal arts colleges" generally refer to standalone institutions, excluding such units.
List of liberal arts colleges
Acadia UniversityAgnes Scott CollegeAlbertson College of IdahoAlbion CollegeAlbright CollegeAlice Lloyd CollegeAllegheny CollegeAlma CollegeAmherst CollegeAntioch CollegeAquinas CollegeAssumption CollegeCollege of the AtlanticAugsburg CollegeAugustana CollegeBard CollegeBaker UniversityBates CollegeBeloit CollegeBenedictine CollegeBennington CollegeBerea CollegeBerry CollegeBethany Lutheran CollegeBirmingham-Southern CollegeBowdoin CollegeBridgewater State College (public)Bryn Mawr College (all-female)Calvin CollegeCarleton CollegeCarroll CollegeCastleton State College (public)Centre CollegeCollege of Charleston (public)Chatham CollegeChristopher Newport University (public)Claremont McKenna CollegeCoe CollegeCoker CollegeColby CollegeColgate UniversityColorado CollegeConcordia CollegeConnecticut CollegeCornell CollegeCumberland UniversityUniversity of the Cumberlands (formally Cumberland College)Curry CollegeDavidson CollegeDeep Springs College (all-male)Denison UniversityDePaul UniversityDePauw UniversityDickinson CollegeEarlham CollegeEckerd CollegeErskine CollegeEastern Connecticut State University (public)Elizabethtown CollegeElmira CollegeEugene Lang CollegeEvergreen State College (public)Fort Lewis University (public)Francis Marion UniversityFranklin and Marshall CollegeFurman UniversityState University of New York at Geneseo (public)Georgetown CollegeGeorgia College & State UniversityGettysburg CollegeGoshen CollegeGoucher CollegeGrinnell CollegeGustavus Adolphus CollegeHamilton CollegeHampden-Sydney College (all-male)Hampshire College (alternative)Hanover CollegeHaverford CollegeHenderson State University (public)Hendrix CollegeHillsdale CollegeHiram CollegeHobart and William Smith CollegesHollins UniversityCollege of the Holy CrossHope CollegeHoughton CollegeIllinois Wesleyan UniversityIthaca CollegeJohnson State College (public)Juniata CollegeKalamazoo CollegeKeene State College (public)Kenyon CollegeKeuka CollegeKing's College, PennsylvaniaKnox CollegeLafayette CollegeLake Forest CollegeLawrence UniversityLewis and Clark CollegeLouisiana CollegeLuther CollegeLyndon State College (public)Lycoming CollegeLynchburg CollegeMacalester CollegeMadonna UniversityManhattan CollegeManhattanville CollegeMarian CollegeMarist CollegeMarlboro CollegeMarygrove CollegeMaryville CollegeUniversity of Mary Washington (public)Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (public)McDaniel CollegeMiddlebury CollegeMillsaps CollegeUniversity of Minnesota Morris (public)University of Montevallo (public)Moravian CollegeMorehouse CollegeMount Allison UniversityMount Holyoke College (all-female)Mount Ida CollegeMuhlenberg CollegeNebraska Wesleyan UniversityNew College of Florida (public)University of North Carolina at Asheville (public)Northland CollegeOberlin CollegeOccidental CollegeOglethorpe UniversityOhio Wesleyan UniversityOlivet CollegeOlivet Nazarene UniversityOur Lady Seat of Wisdom AcademyPacific Lutheran UniversityPitzer CollegePomona CollegeProvidence CollegeUniversity of Puget SoundRamapo College of New Jersey (public)Randolph-Macon CollegeRoanoke CollegeReed CollegeRhodes CollegeRipon CollegeRochester CollegeRockford CollegeRollins CollegeCollege of St. BenedictSaint John Fisher CollegeSt. John's CollegeSt. Lawrence UniversitySt. Mary's College of California (Private)St. Mary's College of Maryland (public)St. Olaf CollegeSt. Thomas Aquinas CollegeSaint Vincent CollegeSalem CollegeSarah Lawrence CollegeScripps CollegeSiena CollegeSkidmore CollegeSmith College (all-female)Sonoma State University (public)University of the South (Sewanee)Southern Oregon University (public)Spelman CollegeSusquehanna UniversitySwarthmore CollegeSweet Briar CollegeTrinity College (Connecticut)Trinity University (Texas)Truman State University (public)Union CollegeUniversity College UtrechtUrsinus CollegeVassar CollegeVirginia Wesleyan CollegeWabash College (all-male)Wartburg CollegeWashington CollegeWashington and Jefferson CollegeWashington and Lee UniversityWellesley College (all-female)Wells CollegeWesleyan UniversityWestmont CollegeWheaton College, IllinoisWheaton College, MassachusettsWhitman CollegeWhittier CollegeWillamette UniversityWilliam Jewell CollegeWilliam Tyndale CollegeWilliams CollegeUniversity of Wisconsin-Superior (public)Wittenberg UniversityThe College of WoosterWorld College West (defunct)
Ranking In 2005, the top fifteen "national" liberal arts colleges according to the influential but controversial U.S. News and World Report 1 rankings were (1) Williams College, (2) Amherst College and Swarthmore College, (4) Wellesley College, (5) Carleton College and Pomona College, (7) Bowdoin College and Davidson College, (9) Haverford College and Wesleyan University, (11) Middlebury College, (12) Vassar College, and (13) Claremont McKenna College, Smith College and Washington & Lee University.
ReferencesDistinctively American: The Residential Liberal Arts Colleges
External links The Annapolis Group (CollegeNews.org)Associated Colleges of the SouthConsortium of Liberal Arts CollegesConsortium for a Strong Minority Presence at Liberal Arts CollegesCouncil of Public Liberal Arts CollegesGreat Lakes Colleges AssociationChristian College Consortium: Christian Liberal Arts CollegesSelective Liberal Arts Consortium
|
|