Jennifer Frey served as Dean of the University of Tulsa’s Honors College. It required students to read deeply in classic tests and to converse vigorously with each other.
More than a quarter of the student body signed up for this rigorous class.
Yet two years after the Honor College opened, it was closed. Its leadrs said that students didn’t want this kind of education, the heavy focus on the liberal arts and the Great Cobversation about the meaning of truth goodness, and beauty. Dean Frey thinks the administrators were wrong.
She wrote in The New York Times.
University students, we’re told, are in crisis. Even at our most elite institutions, they have emaciated attention spans. They can’t — or just won’t — read books. They use artificial intelligence to write their essays. They lack resilience and are beset by mental healthcrises. They complain that they can’t speak their minds, hobbled by an oppressive ideological monoculture and censorship regimes. As a philosopher, I am most distressed by reports that students have no appetite to study the traditional liberal arts; they understand their coursework only as a step toward specific careers.
Over the past two years as the inaugural dean of the University of Tulsa’s Honors College, focused on studying the classic texts of the Western tradition, I’ve seen little evidence of these trends. The curriculum I helped build and teach required students to read thousands of pages of difficult material every semester, decipher historical texts across disciplines and genres and debate ideas vigorously and civilly in small, Socratic seminars. It was tremendously popular among students, who not only do the reading but also engage in rigorous and lively conversations across deep differences in seminars, hallways and dorms. For the past two years, we attracted over a quarter of each freshman class to this reading-heavy, humanities-focused curriculum.
Our success in Tulsa derives from our old-fashioned approach to liberal learning, which does not attempt to prepare students for any career but equips them to fashion meaningful and deeply fulfilling lives. This classical model of education, found in the work of both Plato and Aristotle, asks students to seek to discover what is true, good and beautiful, and to understand why. It is a truly liberating education because it requires deep and sustained reflection about the ultimate questions of human life. The goal is to achieve a modicum of self-knowledge and wisdom about our own humanity. It certainly captured the hearts and minds of our students.
Sadly, this education has fared less well with my university’s new administration. After the former president and provost departed this year, the newly installed provost informed me that the Honors College must “go in a different direction.” That meant eliminating the entire dean’s office and associated staff positions as well as many of our distinctive programs and — through increased class sizes — effectively ending our small seminars. (A representative of the university told The Times that while it had “restructured” the Honors College, the university believes that academics and student experiences will “remain the same.”)
The stated reason for these cuts was to save money — the same reason the University of Tulsa gave in 2019 when it targeted many of the same traditional forms of liberal learning for elimination. Back then, the administration attempted to turn the university into a vocational school. Those efforts largely failed, in part because of lack of student support for the new model.
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An unpleasant truth has emerged in Tulsa over the years. It’s not that traditional liberal learning is out of step with student demand. Instead, it’s out of step with the priorities, values and desires of a powerful board of trustees with no apparent commitment to liberal education, and an administrative class that won’t fight for the liberal arts even when it attracts both students and major financial gifts. The tragedy of the contemporary academy is that even when traditional liberal learning clearly wins with students and donors, it loses with those in power.
For those who do care to see liberal learning thrive on our campuses, the work my colleagues and I did at Tulsa should be a model. How did we do it? We created an intentional community where our students lived in the same dorm and studied the same texts. We shared wisdom, virtue and friendship as our goals. When a university education is truly rooted in the liberal arts, it can cultivate the interior habits of freedom that young people need to live well. Material success alone cannot help a person who lacks the ability to form a clear, informed vision of what is true, good and beautiful. But this vision is something our students both want and need.
At Tulsa, we invited our students to enter “the great conversation” with some of the most influential thinkers of our inherited intellectual tradition. For their first two years they encountered a set curriculum of texts from Homer to Hannah Arendt. These texts were carefully chosen by an interdisciplinary faculty because they transcend their time and place in two senses: They influenced a broader tradition, and they had the potential to help our students reflect in a sustained way on what it means to be a good human being and citizen. Our seminars were led by faculty members who did not lecture or use secondary sources. Rather, the role of the faculty members was to foster and guide conversations among our students that allowed them to think through these questions for and among themselves.
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That our students threw themselves into the task of reading and discussing the great works with one another should not shock. When we — students and teachers alike — share wisdom as a common goal, we will want to do the reading, to dispute one another, to exchange ideas and arguments, to propose amendments and to offer our personal insights. Liberal learning occurs in dialogue with those who object to us, who offer a different perspective or experience — who read the same book as we do in a completely different light.
At the Honors College, we taught our students that wisdom is a distant goal, and that we need to work on ourselves as we try to approach it. We need to cultivate what our college called “the virtues of liberal learning.” For example, we need to cultivate the humility to recognize that we have much to learn from the past and from one another. We need to cultivate a love of truth for its own sake and the courage to speak our minds and to follow the truth wherever it may lead us — even when it leads us into difficult waters where our disagreements are deep and unsettling.
When students realize their own humanity is at stake in their education, they are deeply invested in it. The problem with liberal education in today’s academy does not lie with our students. The real threat to liberal learning is from an administrative class that is content to offer students far less than their own humanity calls for — and deserves.

Excellent article. It mirrors my own experience teaching ethics from Aristotle’s “Ethics”–they all loved it and the discussions were remarkably rich. I started every class asking my students to write a brief (2-page) paper (to share with everyone) on the person they most admire in their lives, and why. The answers were NEVER about that person’s financial or job situation. It was always about issues that concern a person’s excellence and integrity as it personally influenced their lives.
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Before he retired, I would always check out any new John McPhee piece in The New Yorker. Even if the topic seemed totally uninteresting to me, the John McPhee piece was engaging.
It’s not easy to get non-science majors to actually read the assigned readings in college courses. I assign some McPhee pieces and the students who actually read them find them engaging.
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Frances: Also, I have known a number of students’ parents who have the same “disease” about their “investment” producing access to jobs for their children. It’s almost a deal breaker, even though they still harbor positive ideas about “getting a good college education” (if asked, their descriptions would probably reflect the same oversights).
Somehow (and we probably could talk about this) the greater “we” have forgotten the significance of personal development in several arenas of human living. I have heard a lot of lip service over the years, but the substance of it is still fuzzy or even absent.
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Actually most of my students are adult learners who get their tuition as a benefit of their employment. If they don’t get a passing grade for the course, the tuition comes out of their paycheck.
A number of students don’t buy the course textbook or read the reading. They try to google the questions in the assignment which leads to some rather hilarious answers.
However I do get some students that already have their degrees and just sign up for classes that sound interesting to them. Even have had some M.D.’s enroll.
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Billionaires and large companies would like colleges to churn out “career ready” young people, and career based programming may work well for students that are set on a specific career path. For students that are curious about the world and interested in reading and exploring, the liberal arts give young people that opportunity. To an employer a candidate with a liberal arts degree has value in that this program generally prepares a candidate that is well-versed in the world, often has interpersonal communication skills and will adapt well to change.
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At university, I studied English, art, music, and theatre. These I used as an English teacher, writer, editor, illustrator, designer, actor, and director. Of particular use in my career were my studies in philosophy, which thought me how to think carefully in my work. And I have always been grateful to Indiana University, my undergrad alma mater, which in truth maternally nourished (the mater part) my spirit (the alma part) and gave it wings. Now, the Repugnican “leadership” of the state of Indiana has utterly vandalized this university’s offerings in all those areas in the name of creating a school that will “make students career ready.”
Make them ready to be disposable cogs in the corporate machine is more like it.
And on that note, the new AI data center in Wyoming, I just read today, will use FIVE TIMES the entire amount of energy used by all the humans in Wyoming. Wyoming’s new AI data center will need its own power plant and still might overheat the region’s economy | TechRadar
On this topic, I strongly suggest the following book:
Berry, Wendell. Life Is a Miracle: An Essay against Modern Superstition. Counterpoint, Washington, DC: 2000.
It’s a breathtakingly prescient book about what happens when we buy into the modern pseudoscientific proposition that people are machines and then start treating them as such.
The Trumpanista Fascists are saying that gutting our immigrant agricultural workforce is OK because their work can be mechanized. These aren’t people to the folks busy dismantling democracy in service to the oligarchy. And, ofc, that’s what one would expect the Fascists like Miller and Trump and Noem to say.
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Can you improve this recommendation of “The rightous gemstones” “I watched the first episode last night, and I thought it was brilliant. Mega Churches have take the theme of religious hypocrisy to a new level. A major part of the plot line is based on actual events of someone who is an inheritor of a Mega dynasty, so there is truth to the series that I was not expecting.”
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David,
I loved “The Righteous Gemstones.”
ESP the first season.
After the first season, it got repetitious.
But wow! That first season.
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Ooops! Wrong forum!
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College was created to teach the liberal arts. Being well versed in history, literature, and ethics used to be deemed advantageous for leadership in society.
Not so much in our Trump deconstructing society
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According to Google, 1/3 of Fortune 500 CEOs have liberal arts degrees. Policy makers of all stripes typically play to the lowest common denominator through a lack of intellectual curiosity. Conservative states like Oklahoma see our work force as widgets rather than citizens whose gifts contribute to the well being of society.
I was a graduate at Sewanee where our degrees could not be vocational. Most of the graduates have gone on to significant professional success because they have an intellectual dexterity that comes from a challenging broad based education. There is certainly a need for vocational training, but the motivation to contribute to this life requires an exposure to the complexities of our universe. College should be one vehicle that sends us on that journey.
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Thank you, Paul. I agree!
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Indiana governor and chief troglodyte Mike Braun replaced the members of Indiana’s Commission for Higher Education, which has called for cuts of over 400 degree programs in colleges across the state, including more than 200 programs at Indiana University. Gone are many, many programs in arts and sciences. The governor describes this vandalism of course offerings across the state as “sprucing up” college offerings across the state to ensure that students are “career ready.” But even career-oriented degree programs like statistics and astrophysics are being affected because they don’t “enroll a sufficient number of students.” This is utterly ridiculous. The world needs more cosmetologists than cosmologists, certainly, but the latter are necessary. However, I guess that in a world ruled by the Trumpian Republican Party, statisticians are NOT needed because Trumpanistas can and will always just make up whatever numbers they want. If you don’t like the job numbers posted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, you can simply fire its commissioner and put a Fox News host in the position.
All this horrifies me because it was at Indiana University, as an undergraduate, in classes offered by precisely those programs that are being cut, that I developed my love for learning and the skills in the arts that earned me a living throughout my life.
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Also being gutted in Indiana University’s world-renowned music program, which enabled me to earn my living, at times during my life, playing in coffeehouses and teaching guitar. I was fortunate, there, to study with Javier Calderon, who was himself one of the few students of Segovia’s. What a privilege! Alas, after the Repugnican vandalizing of the university’s programs, this won’t happen for future students of that once great university.
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I have long been an extremely strong supporter of Liberal Arts. That’s primarily because I had become a rather mediocre student, but when I was entering my senior year of high school, my family moved to the suburbs and I spent that last year attending a school that had courses which my city high school didn’t have, like World Literature and Russian History. I really enjoyed the courses offered and, to my surprise, I graduated with straight As.
That experience sparked my interest in pursuing my first college degree in Liberal Arts, where I took a wide variety of courses in Fine Arts, Social Sciences, Philosophy etc. –and I excelled there as well. My passion for learning had been rekindled and I discovered that, not only did I have a very wide variety of interests, but that I was actually an intellectual. I had personally learned the veracity of the claim that “Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire” and, not long after, I became a teacher (and earned three more degrees).
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BTW, my grades from my old high school did not arrive at my new high school until many months after I started there and my counselor called me in to ask about them, because I was doing so well at the new school, but at my old school, I had all Ds except for As in English. Nope, no mistake. English had long been the only course that I liked. (My step father, who came on the scene when I was 9 years old, often called me dumb, and had always said that my English teachers were terribly mistaken…)
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ECE,
I hope you realize now that your stepfather was mean and harsh and trying to belittle you.
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Yes, Diane, you are right. Thank you for acknowledging that.
He was actually even worse towards my mom. When she was 71, she had chronic obstructive lung disease and came down with the flu. He took her to a local hospital, which was not where her regular doctors worked, and he managed to get them to put her to sleep –just as he did to all our dogs because he didn’t want to care for them anymore. (He complained to me that he couldn’t play golf anymore because of having to care for her.) I tried to fight him at the hospital, but he provided convincing lies to them and won. And I developed PTSD (for the second time) as a result.
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What a horrible man !
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Yes, truly, horrible!
Weird thing: My step-father lived 12 more years after that happened with my mom and, although I never saw him again, not long after he died, I saw his obituary. So when I told a rabbi about what happened, I asked him if he thought my step-father was in hell and he said maybe he went there for a year, because hell forever is for people like Hitler. Just a year??!!
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To clarify, I have a lot of classroom experience as a teacher, a master’s degree in Special Ed and a doctorate in Educational Psychology, so normally I would say that learning disabilities are organic, not learned. However, my personal life experience suggests, in some cases, that’s not necessarily true –which I’d describe very simply as ‘How you can screw up a student’:
I went to school from the age of 2, had begged to go there, really loved it and did well until I met my step-father. I had just turned 9 and from that time on, he always said my age was a year older than I actually was. “You don’t know math and I do!” he said, “You are 10 years old because you just finished your 9th year!” And every year after that, he said the same kind of thing.
To make things worse, after my mom married him, we moved in the middle of 4th grade and I went to a new school, where they were working on fractions, which we hadn’t gotten to yet at my previous school. So he decided to tutor me and regularly called me dumb. Huge mistake! From that time on, I hated school and floundered –except in English classes. (Those teachers said I was creative and smart.)
In high school and college, I got professional tutors to help me through math classes because I had developed a mental block for numbers. Call me crazy, but to this day, I think I have dyscalculia that was induced by my step-father.
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The good news is that effective teachers can turn things around to a certain extent, which I would title ‘How to save a student”
My 4th grade teacher at my new school read poetry to us at the end of every day, which I looked forward to and adored. So I began to read poetry often on my own and, in 5th grade, after the president was shot, I wrote my first poem to Jackie Kennedy. My teacher then suggested that I send it to the White House, which I did, and I received a reply saying that my poem would be going into the Kennedy Library!
From that time on, I did not think I was dumb in everything. I saw English as my strength, read and wrote a lot, including a play in high school, and virtually all of my English teachers acknowledged and reinforced that. Thus, I did not see myself as being a failure in college, so I decided to first pursue an Associates degree in Liberal Arts –and the rest is a lot of good school history…
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