Publisher's Weekly Review
This timely volume by Wesleyan University president Roth (Memory, Trauma, and History) makes the case for liberal education in America-"broadly based, self-critical and yet pragmatic" learning that encourages independent thinking, empathy, and understanding. For Roth, and the intellectuals he cites-Thomas Jefferson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, W.E.B. DuBois, William James, Jane Addams, John Dewey, Richard Rorty, and others-liberal learning make us and our society better; it makes our democracy stronger; it helps people overcome prejudice. It helps us "navigate in the world." And even if such study doesn't provide vocational training, it creates "habits of action" that make us better thinkers and workers, and helps us tackle society's problems. Using intellectual history to support his position that liberal education matters as much as ever, Roth takes the reader on a journey from the 18th century to today, as he explores how liberal education has figured in the growth of the U.S. Those with more than a passing knowledge of the subject may find some of his recounting basic, but both the introduction and the last chapter include Roth's more personal experiences, and his direct, passionate voice is moving and persuasive. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Wesleyan University president Roth adds his voice to the current debate about college education. Is it vocational instruction meant to lead to immediate employment after graduation or a time for expansive ideas and self-exploration? He argues that liberal education, with its emphasis on critical thinking, is an important part of American ideals of democracy. He traces the historical roots of liberal education from the ancient Greeks through the Middle Ages and the Enlightenment. But he focuses on American thinkers, including Thomas Jefferson, Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. DuBois, William James, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Jane Addams, John Dewey, and others. He examines the old debate about the usefulness and even democracy of a liberal education whether it is aimed at the elite and is useless for the masses as well as current threats from the government, from business, from political interests, and within the universities themselves. Roth argues that the utilitarians who push toward the practical will turn out graduates trained for yesterday's jobs who have not learned the intellectual rigor and flexibility needed to adjust to whatever the future may bring.--Bush, Vanessa Copyright 2010 Booklist
Choice Review
In this slender but readable volume, Roth chronicles the tradition of liberal learning and makes a compelling case for it in the face of today's strong countercurrents. Roth is the author of five books on intellectual history and president of Wesleyan Univ., a highly selective Connecticut liberal arts college. Here he presents the extraordinary place of the liberal arts in America's history; the monumental changes it has undergone; the importance of key figures in its history; and the controversies and issues faced in the past and which are faced today by those who believe in, advance, and conduct liberal learning. The author's core premise is far from unique: while obsolescence is an unwanted but inevitable outcome of vocational/ professional education, liberal education provides the lifelong necessities for a life of quality. Far from reactionary, Roth's perspective is forward-looking and innovative. Though initially a skeptic about massive open online courses (MOOCs), for example, he tells of the rewarding experience in which a virtual worldwide learning community emerged around a MOOC he planned and conducted. This book merits a wide readership. It would provide especially valuable information to parents who are distraught over cost and inclined to see the benefit of higher education only in material terms. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels. --J. David Gillespie, College of Charleston
Library Journal Review
Roth (president, history, Wesleyan Univ.) argues that liberal education is not only necessary for individual development but is essential for the growth of active -citizens and for the vitality of a democratic government. He explores American intellectual history to present major thinkers who strongly supported a broad humanistic education. Thomas Jefferson shaped early American political institutions and founded the -University of Virginia in 1819 with a rich curriculum to prepare thoughtful citizens to lead the new republic. Two 19th--century -African American writers, Frederick -Douglass (1818-1895) and David Walker (1796-1830), promoted higher education as an instrument for ending slavery and liberating slaves. Roth emphasizes other key American writers, including Benjamin Franklin, Jane -Addams, and John Dewey, as advocates for a pragmatic education enhancing individual progression and societal advancement. While Roth explains recent attacks on universities that call for a return to the traditional canon or a focus on vocationalism, he rejects these movements and asserts that liberal education is still relevant and essential to a healthy national community. VERDICT Recommended for readers interested in higher education. This title will also appeal to those who wish to explore U.S. intellectual history as a thoughtful examination of the educational vision of major American writers-a vision that remains essential to a vital contemporary society.-Elizabeth -Hayford, formerly with Associated Coll. of the Midwest, Evanston, IL (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.