Liberal Arts Colleges: Thriving, Surviving, or Endangered?

Front Cover
Brookings Institution Press, Dec 10, 2010 - Political Science - 201 pages

Private liberal arts colleges provide high-quality undergraduate education, but their survival is in doubt. Some see the liberal arts as increasingly irrelevant in a world marked by growing demand for technical training. Others wonder how private colleges, many with few students and high tuitions, can compete successfully against heavily subsidized public colleges and universities.

David Breneman, an economist and former college president, explores these and many other educational and economic issues in this book, a detailed analysis of more than 200 liberal arts colleges. Breneman describes the recent financial and curricular history of liberal arts colleges. He explains how they have survived and how many have prospered despite severe competitive pressures. He shows how both outsiders and college administrators themselves misunderstand the role and effects of unfunded student aid (tuition discounting) and how this misunderstanding leads to questionable policies. He shows why the universe of liberal arts colleges—which includes such diverse members as women's colleges, black colleges, religiously affiliated colleges, and highly selective colleges—have had diverse experiences and confront different futures.

Breneman includes sketches of twelve colleges that provide insight into both the shared and distinctive concerns of a varied but representative set of liberal arts colleges. He weaves these specific cases into a concluding chapter on the prospects for liberal arts colleges.

This book is designed to appeal to college administrators, trustees, faculty, students, alumni, policymakers, and anyone who cares about quality higher education.

 

Contents

I
1
II
20
III
36
IV
51
V
54
VI
56
VII
57
VIII
58
XXIII
84
XXIV
86
XXV
87
XXVI
88
XXVII
90
XXVIII
91
XXIX
92
XXX
116

IX
61
X
62
XI
64
XII
66
XIII
68
XVI
71
XVII
73
XVIII
74
XIX
78
XX
80
XXI
82
XXII
83
XXXI
120
XXXII
122
XXXIII
138
XXXIV
140
XXXV
141
XXXVI
162
XXXVII
164
XXXVIII
167
XXXIX
171
XL
175
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