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At a 2003 Commencement address, University President Lawrence H.
Summers acknowledged the “contradictory themes” driving the
then-fledgling Harvard College Curricular Review. He pointed to a
fundamental tension between the desire to give students “greater
flexibility in choosing courses” and the goal of providing them with
foundational knowledge in topics such as history, literature, and
science.
More than two years later, the final report of the review’s
Committee on General Education indicates that this clash has yet to be
completely resolved.
While the report extensively justifies the importance of
certain types of classes such as those in moral reasoning, quantitative
analysis, and foundational knowledge, the recommendations themselves
stop short of requiring these components.
The proposed system of general education would enable driven
students to select the broad education that fits them best, but has the
inherent danger of enabling some students to avoid challenging or
unfamiliar academic territory. The extent to which the Faculty would be
willing to risk such flexibility stands as the greatest question
surrounding general education’s future at Harvard.
FOUNDATION OR FLEXIBILITY?
Since the curricular review began in 2003, reports and public
statements have indicated a desire to create foundational courses on
broad topics such as Western history. Yet that goal has been nagged by
a clear uncertainty about how to reconcile these courses with the
principle of allowing students the flexibility to fulfill their general
education requirements through departmental courses.
An April 2004 report, the first major update on the status of
the review released to the public, suggested that foundational courses
should be a “central component” of the new general education
requirement. The report, however, recommended that students be able to
rely on departmental courses to fulfill all of their requirements if
they wished, in contradiction with the “central” nature of the
foundational courses—which would be offered outside of departments.
Almost one year later, the March 2005 “Draft Final Report”
from the Committee on General Education suggested introducing a
requirement that all students take two foundational courses, called
“Harvard College Courses.”
That requirement does not appear in last week’s report.
OPPORTUNITY OVER REQUIREMENT
The April 2004 report abstained from recommending a firm
curriculum and the March 2005 draft report laid out recommendations
with very little discussion of their justification.
In contrast, the recent report from the Committee on General
Education attempts to satisfy the supporters of both foundational
knowledge and a flexible curriculum through the use of subtly varying
levels of requirement, recommendation, and opportunity.
At its core, the report is not about the courses that a student must take—it is about the courses that a student should take.
For example, the report “strongly recommends” that students
take courses in moral reasoning and in quantitative analysis, and goes
to great length to justify the importance of these courses, but does
not advocate making such courses a mandatory part of a Harvard
education.
The report also calls for the creation of full-year
foundational “Courses in General Education.” It stresses “the
importance of providing students access to courses that counter the
fragmentation of knowledge” by looking at issues beyond the scope of
any one particular course. But the report calls for these courses as
well to be optional, not required.
The committee had a “desire to set out a curriculum that
expands opportunities—not requirements—for students,” the report
states in explanation for its refusal to mandate these classes. “The
committee did not feel comfortable proposing, as [a replacement to the
Core, a system] that would provide even less choice.”
Yet, as with April 2004 report’s optional “central component,”
the final report of the Committee on General Education struggles to
reconcile the perceived importance of these courses with the desire for
flexibility.
Even the report’s sometimes-contradictory terminology reflects
this struggle—the broad general education courses are to be “integral,
but optional.”
DIVERGENT PATHS
The report’s recommendations, should the Faculty enact them,
would give students the ability to take greatly divergent paths in
their plan of general education.
A physics concentrator, for example, could take a full year
foundational course on Western history, a full year foundational course
on European books, and courses on moral reasoning and globalization to
complete his general education requirements under the report’s
proposal.
But another physics concentrator could complete the same broad
requirements through three narrowly-focused courses each in government
and music.
The suggested framework for general education will provide
undergraduates with far greater ownership over shaping their academic
experience and the opportunity to create a personalized curriculum
drawing classes from the entire course catalog. But with fewer
requirements to ensure breadth of study, that physics concentrator
risks missing out on many areas of the academic spectrum normally
afforded by a liberal arts education.
—Staff writer Evan H. Jacobs can be reached at ehjacobs@fas.harvard.edu.
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