From the editor.Ninety years ago the Proceedings of the first Annual Meeting of the newly formed Association of American Colleges were published in the Association's journal, the Bulletin. This issue of the Bulletin's successor, Volume 90 of Liberal Education, looks back at that first publication with its record of the ideas that forged unity among 203 institutions that had never previously organized in common purpose. United in order that their institutions might prevail amid the growing competitors to their tradition of undergraduate education undergraduate education Medtalk In the US, a 4+ yr college or university education leading to a baccalaureate degree, the minimum education level required for medical school admission; undergraduate medical education refers to the 4 yrs of medical school. Cf CME. , the founders aspired to influence through education the building of a strong nation. In the spirit of their ambitions, the Featured Topic section takes stock of the current enterprises in undergraduate education and looks forward across the educational horizon. Reading those yellowing pages of 1915, I absorbed the ideas that the speakers developed in their formal and highly literate prose style with which presidents addressed the assembled colleague presidents. It was a deeply satisfying encounter, something of a voyage of discovery, with those founders. The present-day commentators to the articles selected for reprinting, Bobby Fong and Nancy Dye Nancy S. Dye was the 13th president of Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. She was appointed President of Oberlin after having served as Acting President of Vassar College for several months in 1992. Dye attended Vassar College as an undergraduate. , note that the founders' interests are earlier versions of the concerns that contemporary presidents attend to. How enlightening en·light·en tr.v. en·light·ened, en·light·en·ing, en·light·ens 1. To give spiritual or intellectual insight to: it is to have Fred Rudolph, commenting on two talks from the Bulletin, bring his considerable knowledge of the history of higher education higher education Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art. to understanding the challenges facing the church-related colleges of 1915. For the present environment, Elisabeth Zinser recapitulates in contemporary terms the importance of liberal education for all undergraduates. And just as the convener of that first meeting, Robert Kelly There are severable notable individuals named Robert Kelly:
The presence of the past can enlarge our comprehension of the endeavors that engage all of us: the capacious ca·pa·cious adj. Capable of containing a large quantity; spacious or roomy. See Synonyms at spacious. [From Latin cap liberal education to which every student should have access for their full human development. It was the hope of the founders. And it is our hope for the twenty-first century. |
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