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Missing knowledge. (President's Message).


Mid-way through his initial semester se·mes·ter  
n.
One of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each of an academic year.



[German, from Latin (cursus) s
 as a first-year college student, my son was given the following writing assignment: Can Democracy Be Established through Conquest? Discuss with reference to course readings on the Hebrews, Greeks, etc. A timely question--not just for first-year students, but for our nation, and the entire global community. But how well has our collective course of study prepared Americans to provide knowledgeable answers?

As we go to press, the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  is expected to soon initiate military action in Iraq. Administration leaders have fanned out across the world to explain that war in Iraq will ultimately create a new frontier New Frontier

President John F. Kennedy’s legislative program, encompassing such areas as civil rights, the economy, and foreign relations. [Am. Hist.: WB, K:212]

See : Aid, Governmental
 for democracy in the Middle East Proposed reasons for the relative absence of liberal democracy in the Middle East are diverse, from the long history of imperial rule by the Ottoman Empire, Britain and France and the contemporary political and military intervention by the United States, all of which have been blamed for . Headlines tell us that millions are rallying in other democracies against the buildup build·up also build-up  
n.
1. The act or process of amassing or increasing: a military buildup; a buildup of tension during the strike.

2.
 to war, not because they support Saddam Hussein Saddam Hussein

(born April 28, 1937, Tikrit, Iraq—died Dec. 30, 2006, Baghdad) President of Iraq (1979–2003). He joined the Ba'th Party in 1957. Following participation in a failed attempt to assassinate Iraqi Pres.
, but because they fear American power. Thoughtful people everywhere are asking whether peace--much less the advance of democratic self-governance--can emerge from a global strategy built on the unchallenged prowess of a superpower democracy. When I think about these questions as an educator, I am struck by the disconnect disconnect - SCSI reconnect  between the contemporary practices of liberal education and the knowledge we now need to reach reasoned conclusions about our democracy's role in the world.

As this issue of Liberal Education reminds us, many educational leaders in newly independent democracies are taking a close look at American designs for liberal and general education. They do so because their countries need citizens who will take responsibility for the future of democratic freedom and because liberal education has presented itself for over two centuries as the best possible preparation for both democracy and civic responsibility. If we are honest with ourselves, however, the de facto [Latin, In fact.] In fact, in deed, actually.

This phrase is used to characterize an officer, a government, a past action, or a state of affairs that must be accepted for all practical purposes, but is illegal or illegitimate.
 U.S. curriculum on "democracy's challenges" is, at best, episodic episodic

sporadic; occurring in episodes. e. falling a paroxymal disorder described in Cavalier King Charles spaniels in which affected dogs, starting at an early age, experience episodes of extensor rigidity, possibly brought on by stress. e.
 and shallow. American college American College is the name of:
  • American College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
  • The American College in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India
  • The American College of the Immaculate Conception, Leuven (also known as Louvain), Belgium
 students do--when we succeed with them--learn to think analytically and critically. These are important skills in a democratic society. But it's a matter of chance whether college students devote those skills to the kinds of questions that now confront us as participants in the world's most powerful democracy. There is a large and growing gap between the preparation Americans receive as democratic citizens and the kin ds of things we need to know to make sense of the global landscape.

Take, as a case in point, my son, the first-year college student. In high school, like most Americans, he encountered twentieth century history mainly as a rapidly "covered" tale of American triumphs over evil regimes. There was no attention to the history of democratic ideas and practices, and very little time spent on the wider world. Now in college, he is taking a very good course--elective, not required--focused on the roots of Western culture. In form and content, the program is a recognizable descendant of the Western Civilization Noun 1. Western civilization - the modern culture of western Europe and North America; "when Ghandi was asked what he thought of Western civilization he said he thought it would be a good idea"
Western culture
 sequence invented during World War I. As the assignment described in the first paragraph suggests, his professor clearly wants him to connect the study of classical Western texts to the contemporary world around him. (And I am grateful for that expectation.)

Nonetheless, we have to ask about the adequacy of "fit" between a close study of major humanities texts from the ancient world and our civic need to make sense of alternative American policies for a fractured, turbulent, and threatened global community. There is enormous value in the study of major cultural traditions and texts, undeniably. But we need much more than this to educate citizens who are prepared to engage knowledgeably with questions about democracy and consent, not just for fifth-century Athens, but for the twenty-first century global community.

Over a quarter of a century ago, historians acknowledged that the tradition of "Western Civilization"--initially organized as a history of the ideas and institutions basic to constitutional democracy--was falling out of the core curriculum, because so many scholars no longer viewed "The West" as the optimal framework for presenting the roots and contours Contours may mean:
  • Contour lines on a map indicating elevation
  • The Contours, a Motown musical group notable for the hit single "Do You Love Me"
See also: plain
 of the modem world to students. William McNeill William McNeill may refer to:
  • William H. McNeill, Canadian historian
  • William McNeill, philosopher
 fiercely rebuked historians for their failure to replace this declining core course with a World History framework of analogous intellectual substance and civic focus. Since then, the majority of four-year institutions have sought to expand students' cultural horizons by requiring the study of cultural diversity and/or world cultures. Engaging diversity, as we have frequently noted in these pages, has become a required preparation for life in a diverse democracy.

Cross-cultural studies Cross-cultural comparisons take several forms. One is comparison of case studies, another is controlled comparison among variants of a common derivation, and a third is comparison within a sample of cases.  are, nonetheless, only a part of the democratic learning Americans need for the twenty-first century. Democracy itself, explored historically, cross-culturally, comparatively, and prospectively, should surely become a core theme of Americans' civic education.

This year, AAC&U is joining with Campus Compact to shape a new Center for Liberal Education and Civic Engagement. Designed to support both faculty scholarship and curricular innovation, the Center will seek to ground the powerful contemporary movement toward service learning in an equally powerful exploration of democratic histories and aspirations. For the first few years at least, this Center will focus on the unifying theme of Journeys to Democracy, as a way of exploring both global and U.S. struggles over democracy's inherited inherited

received by inheritance.


inherited achondroplastic dwarfism
see achondroplastic dwarfism.

inherited combined immunodeficiency
see combined immune deficiency syndrome (disease).
 legacies and contested future.

Journeys to Democracy is a theme that has large potential. Ultimately, it is the kind of theme that can provide a much-needed unifying framework for Americans' learning as both global and U.S. citizens. To my mind--as a parent, an educator, and a citizen in a democracy under "High Alert"--it is time to face up directly to our collective need for a successor curriculum to Western Civilization. Together, we need to devise forms of analysis and exploration that can provide--for this tumultuous era of global interdependence--new ways of exploring democracy's past, present, and future.
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Author:Schneider, Carol Geary
Publication:Liberal Education
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2003
Words:943
Previous Article:What I teach and what I teach for. (My View).(English teachers and job satisfaction)
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