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In Defense of a Liberal Education
In Defense of a Liberal Education | Fareed Zakaria
11 posts | 8 read | 2 reading | 38 to read
CNN host and best-selling author Fareed Zakaria argues for a renewed commitment to the worlds most valuable educational tradition. The liberal arts are under attack. The governors of Florida, Texas, and North Carolina have all pledged that they will not spend taxpayer money subsidizing the liberal arts, and they seem to have an unlikely ally in President Obama. While at a General Electric plant in early 2014, Obama remarked, "I promise you, folks can make a lot more, potentially, with skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might with an art history degree." These messages are hitting home: majors like English and history, once very popular and highly respected, are in steep decline. "I get it," writes Fareed Zakaria, recalling the atmosphere in India where he grew up, which was even more obsessed with getting a skills-based education. However, the CNN host and best-selling author explains why this widely held view is mistaken and shortsighted. Zakaria eloquently expounds on the virtues of a liberal arts educationhow to write clearly, how to express yourself convincingly, and how to think analytically. He turns our leaders' vocational argument on its head. American routine manufacturing jobs continue to get automated or outsourced, and specific vocational knowledge is often outdated within a few years. Engineering is a great profession, but key value-added skills you will also need are creativity, lateral thinking, design, communication, storytelling, and, more than anything, the ability to continually learn and enjoy learningprecisely the gifts of a liberal education. Zakaria argues that technology is transforming education, opening up access to the best courses and classes in a vast variety of subjects for millions around the world. We are at the dawn of the greatest expansion of the idea of a liberal education in human history.
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review
MyNamesParadise
Pickpick

This was a book I needed to listen to at the right time. Fareed argues how it is not a liberal education that is a bad thing, but how it's currently being taught is the problem. Fascinating listen with a lot of facts that will make you think about & see certain professions & cultures differently. I'm glad I'm able to think critically & analytically & one day hopefully that will lead me to a better job/career.

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MyNamesParadise

This book has plenty of facts & makes you think, I'm currently regretting majoring in English given the job market. I've never been a career thinking oriented type person, so in school I took the classes I wanted & my chronic anxiety prevented me from thinking long term. My timing of listening to this audiobook is ironic. I've always enjoyed Fareed Zakaria's shows on CNN & he delivers a great narration!

mcipher But so few people get jobs in what their degree is in! My mother in law is a social worker, but she majored in history (for example). I think the fact that you have a degree is sometimes more important than what it's in! 7y
melrailey I agree with @mcipher. I started off as a forestry major but hated the chemistry and switched to English. Found out a couple of years ago that the national park service would have loved to have me as a grant writer (so I could have ended up in the NPS system after all). But now I'm working in the renewable energy field. Go figure. 7y
LauraBeth Agree with @mcipher. I went to a liberal arts college and majored in Political Science. I ended up with a very happy and successful career in advertising and marketing 😀 7y
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MyNamesParadise @mcipher @LauraBeth @melrailey it's like jobs im drawn to don't require a 4 year degree so employers prob think I'm overqualified. Jobs that seem common sense like require a masters & theres nothing I'm too passionate about to go back to school. I don't know where to look for jobs or what to do 😔 7y
LauraBeth If you enjoyed majoring in English - please don't ever regret that! Those jobs you're drawn too? Seek them out and never worry if you think your degree makes you overqualified. Do a job that makes you happy. Your degree in English makes you wildly employable! I've hired copywriters who wrote my ads, speech writers, PR consultants to write press releases - all these people majored in English! (edited) 7y
MyNamesParadise @LauraBeth Thank you! 🙂 7y
kspenmoll Agree with all! History major; worked in clinic, Doctor offices, daycare, finally teaching. Did have to get certified but teachers in CT all need a Masters eventually anyway. My background in history& especially the writing, has been invaluable as I teach in a HS &!co teach as well. You will find a good fit. Even Google wants people who can write. 😍 7y
MicheleinPhilly I'm with @LauraBeth on this one. I also went to a liberal arts school and majored in Psychology. Before I went back to school to get my MLIS, I worked in marketing and communications. I would be much more likely to hire someone I knew was capable of critical thought than someone with a "business" degree. 7y
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Morinen
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When I first heard about Scott saying this I gave so much side eye there was none left for three days. (I have an anthro degree.) Zakaria is doing a great job of capturing American anti-intellectualism as it applies to higher education in an extremely concise way.

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Spiderfelt
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More than teaching students how to think, a liberal education teaches how to write and how to speak, skills essential for individuals no matter their profession. We need more history, philosophy and anthropology majors to express with eloquence and clarity the complex ideas developed by the engineers and scientists of tomorrow. We need people who can contextualize our current crises by explaining the world around us.

Yournewfriendsams 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽 8y
Yournewfriendsams Also beautiful picture 😍 8y
Spiderfelt Thanks @Yournewfriendsams This is the Edmonds Library, where I work. I see the most amazing sunsets looking across Puget Sound at the Olympic Mountains. I pinch myself almost every shift. 8y
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LauraBeth What a beautiful place to work!! 8y
Spiderfelt See my quote from the introduction by David Denby for more fuel on the same subject in 8y
Magpiegem Wow you are so lucky. That is one gorgeous view!!! 8y
kspenmoll So well said! (edited) 7y
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GoneFishing

Liberal education should give people the skills “that will help them get ready for their sixth job, not their first job.

kspenmoll 👏👏👏 7y
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Khokhee
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Pickpick

Refreshing and very well-written.

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BookishMarginalia
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This book makes a coherent argument about the benefits of a wide-ranging education based on rigorous study of the liberal arts and sciences. Instead of professionalization and early specialization, Zakaria argues for the pleasures of learning to read, write, communicate, and cooperate effectively. None of this is novel, but it is well documented and explained. Common sense just when we need it most. #preachingtothechoir

Alisnazzy 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼 8y
Titania I have an advanced degree in engineering, but I absolutely agree! My liberal arts classes (I took a lot for an engineer) helped build my worldview and enriched my life. Thumbs up for liberal arts! 8y
LatteSue I agree. 8y
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Hooked_on_books I'm in the sciences and am thrilled with my liberal arts background. It helped me learn how to think and relate with others, which is vital in my job and life. The book sounds really good. 8y
megt I love my liberal arts degree! 8y
Laalaleighh And certain presidential candidates want to cut funding for liberal arts 🙄 8y
akfreeborn This book is well argued. We need to make thinkers not worker bees. 8y
PurpleyPumpkin I've sometimes struggled to put this exact concept into words. Well done Fareed! And thanks for sharing this quote @BookishMarginalia. 8y
MyNamesParadise I've added this to my list! I've always been one of those people that's always loved my own time than being at school or work. I'd rather be a free thinking person than a slave to the machine of the 9-5, but I'm still young. I may sing a different tune in 20 years. I'm excited to read this book. Doctors & engineers are important but not everyone is geared towards that or have natural abilities in those areas. Sorry for the essay 8y
Spiderfelt Great review! My daughter is beginning to look at colleges. Despite the fact that she wants to work in public health, she understands the benefit of studying at a liberal arts college. 8y
Spiderfelt I'm thrilled to hear your particular perspectives @Hooked_on_books and @Titania 8y
BookishMarginalia @Spiderfelt I'm glad! I wish more students --and parents-- understood the importance of a liberal arts education. 8y
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BookishMarginalia
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Reading as a powerful "path to knowledge": "There are few substitutes to understanding an issue in depth than reading a book about it." #preachingtothechoir

[DELETED] 3604292746 So true ❤️❤️❤️ 8y
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BookishMarginalia
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Why we read, according to #FareedZakaria

JSW Yes. And by changing myself, I change the world. 8y
BookishMarginalia @JSW Indeed! 👍🏼🤓 8y
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sparklemotion 👌🏽and that's how you can start helping to change the world. 8y
KikiLovesBooks ❤️ 8y
Theresa Love that! 8y
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BookishMarginalia
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"We are drowning in information, while starving for wisdom." The #epigraph by #EOWilson ??

MrBook Yep, I agree! In fact, tell me if you disagree please, but no one puts anything to memory anymore. How many people even have a half-dozen phone numbers memorized 😕. 8y
SusanInTiburon I'm not sure that outsourcing memory is a bad thing, or even a new one. I think we used to divvy up info responsibilities more - e.g. you do insurance and auto info, I do bank accounts and warranties, he has baseball statistics, she knows bands, this one movies, that one cooking... I think of Internet as a giant brain bank, not a vampire. 8y
SusanInTiburon Of course, we should all still be memorizing poetry in case of emergency. 8y
JSW Knowing how to learn, how to sort reliable info from gossip, and how to be proactive with information are key life skills. 8y
BookishMarginalia @mrbook I have a pretty bad memory, so even before cell phones I doubt I knew 6 phone numbers by heart 8y
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BookishMarginalia
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Spending some time pondering why a free-ranging education is still best #preachingtothechoir

Makatma Love the hashtag! 8y
Laura317 If I could go back, I would do Montessori style teachings. So cool! 8y
Laalaleighh Ok all your posts have convinced me. Stacking this 📚 8y
BookishMarginalia @Laalaleighh 👍🏼 it's short, clear, interesting reading 8y
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