
When my oldest daughter went to college, my father just could not understand why she was enrolled in a class called Women’s Studies. Apparently, Women’s Studies was one of the courses under the same block as Western Civilization, and everyone was required to take at least one course in that block. She explained that she had tried to sign up for an actual Western Civilization class, but it was full, so she had to choose another class, and Women’s Studies was open. My father could not understand such an odd thing. In his day, everybody took Western Civilization. No exceptions. In fact, everyone took mostly the same courses for the first two years of college, because back then, everyone received a liberal arts education. When I went to college, the same thing was pretty much true. We all took many of the same classes, and everyone still had to sign up for Western Civilization. But by the time my daughter entered college, things had changed.
Not too many years ago, most colleges and universities provided something called a liberal arts education. Even my father, who eventually majored in business, received a liberal arts education. Years after he graduated from college, he still had many of the literature books he had read while enrolled in his collegiate studies – novels like Gulliver’s Travels, Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Longfellow’s poetry, and others. He had become attached to those books; the lessons they taught and the beauty of the language they used had made their way into his thinking. And he passed them on to me; I still have some of them and treasure them because they were my father’s.
But those books were part of the liberal arts education he received. And plenty of students today study the same literature, whether in high school or college. The difference is that it is possible to graduate from college today having not taken a single course in Western Civilization or a literature course that includes traditional literary classics. This situation has come about because of the demise of the liberal arts. By the way, I asked my daughter one time what they discussed in her Women’s Studies course. Her response was, “We talked about totally inappropriate things all semester.” Hmmm.
What is a liberal arts education, anyway? And why does it matter?
The term liberal arts, including the division of the arts into the Trivium and the Quadrivium, dates from the Middle Ages. In classical education, the liberal arts were the branches of knowledge that started young people on their lifelong journey of learning. The goal of a classical education was to be an Educated Person. And the liberal arts were what enabled people to be educated. Whether students ended up plowing fields as a farmer, caring for patients as a physician, or working as an engineer, a liberal arts education would teach them how to live and enable them to rise above their environment, resulting in true freedom (Joseph 5). After all, the word liberal comes from the Latin word liber, meaning “free.”
The difference between a liberal arts education and the more practical type of education that most colleges now emphasize can be found in their goals. A liberal arts education, which was not completed until graduation from college, included the Trivium and the Quadrivium, and emphasized broad reading across the humanities and other disciplines, critical thinking, and clear, effective communication. The end goal was internal for the student and was aimed at developing his own soul through the richness of his studies (Joseph 4).
Practical studies, or the utilitarian arts, were also important, but their focus was different, because these arts enabled people to serve others and to earn a living (Joseph 5). And for sure, people need to be able to earn a living, but it was commonly believed that those who have developed their own minds and souls through a liberal education are better equipped “to serve others in a professional or other capacity” (Joseph 4).
The Liberal Arts Teach One How To Live
Historically, most colleges and universities offered a liberal arts education, not because earning a living was considered to be unimportant, but because, as Sister Miriam Joseph says in The Trivium, “the liberal arts…teach one how to live…they enable a person to rise above his material environment to live an intellectual, a rational, and therefore a free life in gaining truth. Jesus Christ said, ‘You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free’” (John 8:32) (5).
There are still a few liberal arts colleges left out there, but even at a state school, it is possible to put together one’s own classics/liberal arts program if the university offers enough options. And with the increase in the number of students enrolled in classical education these days, we may be seeing more and more students coming out of high school already having begun their journey towards the liberal arts.
Joseph, Sister Miriam, C.S.C., Ph.D. The Trivium: The Liberal Arts of Logic, Grammar, and Rhetoric. Paul Dry Books, Inc., 1937, 2002.




































