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Chapter I: Introduction to the College
"Religion, morality, and knowledge being
essential to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools
and the means of education shall forever be encouraged."
- from the Northwest Ordinance, carved
above the entrance to Angell Hall
The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
at the University of Michigan is a liberal arts and science college.
Since 1841 the College has educated students in courses of study
leading to the bachelor's degree. A faculty of two instructed
six freshmen and one sophomore that first year in rhetoric, grammar,
Latin and Greek literature and antiquities, algebra, geometry,
surveying, natural science, ancient history, and Greek philosophy.
A College faculty of approximately 900 offers more than 3,500
undergraduate courses to its 15,709 undergraduates (Fall Term,
2001 enrollment), nearly two-thirds the total undergraduate enrollment
on the Ann Arbor campus. The emphasis on breadth of learning,
evidenced by the variety of courses in natural sciences, social
sciences, and the humanities required of students more than a
century and a half ago, remains a hallmark of the liberal arts
education.
However, the College of Literature, Science, and
the Arts at the University of Michigan is more than a traditional
liberal arts and science college since it interacts with eighteen
other schools and colleges of a large university. For example,
in addition to the undergraduate curricula, graduate programs
lead to the master's and doctoral degrees. These graduate programs
offer more than opportunities for advanced study; they enhance
the intellectual and academic atmosphere of the College. Professors
teach both undergraduates and graduates. Research projects and
some classes involve both undergraduates and graduates. The College
provides an enriched education by way of these opportunities
for undergraduates to associate with graduate students and a
research faculty.
Students in the College do not simply elect a variety
of courses from the multitude available to them in the University.
They relate courses to one another in a way that enables each
student to achieve breadth of understanding in several fields
of study and depth in one or two. Students must not only perform
satisfactorily in their courses; they must also plan programs
of study which support broadly defined principles of distribution
and concentration. Academic advisors assist students in designing
such programs suited to their particular needs and interests.
The College sees its primary responsibility, then,
as providing an excellent opportunity for students to achieve
a liberal education. Not all educators agree on what constitutes
a liberal education, but they do agree that it is neither too
narrowly focused nor too diffuse. Students are therefore required
to elect courses from a variety of departments and disciplines
to ensure exposure to different ideas and ways of thinking. An
English Composition requirement is common to all degrees, since
educated men and women should be able to express themselves clearly
in speech and writing in their own language.
Increased skill in the use of language may lead
students to the study of literature, which reveals the avenues
of thought and feeling that language can open. Some students
will want to be able to understand, speak, read, and write a
language other than their own, and be acquainted with the literature
of that language. Mastery of a language increases subtlety of
mind and sharpens sensitivity to the use and meaning of words
in one's own language. Many students will also seek some historical
perspective on their own times by studying the art, artifacts,
and ideas of the civilizations from which their own have developed.
Because mathematics underlies many fields of study
in the natural and social sciences and is increasingly useful
to some humanists, most students will find further understanding
of mathematics essential to their education. And just as they
may couple language study with literature, they may couple mathematics
with study in at least one of the natural or physical sciences
whose creative efforts so dominate modern culture. It is in these
areas, in fact, where human reason and imagination have made
their most dramatic progress since the seventeenth century, but
especially in the twentieth.
Finally, in order to understand the duties and
problems facing them as members of a complex society, most students
will want to investigate at least one of the social sciences.
A variety of courses offering instruction in comparative social
systems, governments, economies, histories, and cultures meets
this end.
In designing their academic programs, liberal arts
and science students plan for depth of study as well as breadth
of scope. To study a subject in depth can be the most rewarding
and liberating experience students can have, and one that may
occupy them throughout their lives. Although students should
not specialize to the neglect of distribution, knowledge advances
by specialization, and students can gain some of the excitement
of discovery by pressing toward the outer limits of human knowledge
in some field. Close study of a seemingly narrow area of investigation
will often disclose ramifications and connections that will alter
perspectives on many other subjects. Such study also refines
judgments and introduces students to processes for discovering
new truths.
By graduating students with a liberal education,
the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts continues its
long tradition of public responsibility. Established skills and
knowledge are transmitted to these men and women throughout their
undergraduate careers. They also develop their ability to think,
to respond to ideas, and to test hypotheses. Individuals educated
in this way will be able to live successfully in a rapidly changing
world and to give it necessary leadership and vision.

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