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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Robert Mitchell General Education Task Force Issues Final Report Faculty To Discuss, Then Decide Next Steps Cambridge, Mass. - February 7, 2007 - The Task Force on General Education from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University has issued its final report, in which it recommends a new program to replace the Core Curriculum that was introduced in the late 1970s. In the words of the Task Force: “It is Harvard’s mission to help students to lead flourishing and productive lives by providing a general education curriculum that is responsive to the conditions of the twenty-first century. General education is the place where students are brought to understand how everything that we teach in the arts and sciences relates to their lives and to the world that they will confront. General education is the public face of liberal education.” The program proposed is consistent with past general education programs at Harvard: it prescribes a set of requirements and calls for a set of extra-departmental courses, rather than advocates that students have free range across existing departmental offerings in the form of an open distribution system. “Since 1945,” the authors state, “the Harvard Faculty has believed in the importance of taking a stand on the question of what students need to learn. General education is a statement about why a liberal education matters.” The report proposes a program that emphasizes subjects, rather than academic disciplines, and that seeks to inspire lifelong interest in those subjects with a pedagogy that relates material studied in the classroom to issues and problems of wide concern to undergraduates. Students would be required to take a course in each of the following areas.
The Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Jeremy R. Knowles, said: “This fine report resolves the often conflicting desiderata for programs of general education. Its categories are both thoughtfully defined and clearly motivated. The impressive new program proposed will provide an experience that is comprehensive without being diffuse, and that strengthens the link between life and learning in a way that will greatly benefit our students. I am grateful to the Task Force for its tremendous hard work, its responsiveness to the Faculty, and for this eloquently persuasive final report.” Harvard President Derek Bok said, “I congratulate the task force for a fine report. The members have done an excellent job of listening to their colleagues and crafting a thoughtful and coherent structure to further the aims of a strong undergraduate education.” The Task Force was convened last spring, worked through the summer, and issued a preliminary report in October 2006. Following that, the task force continued to consult with many groups of faculty and students, with many departments, as well as with numerous individuals, resulting in this final report. The report, distributed to the Faculty today, will be discussed at the full FAS faculty meeting on Feb. 13. After that, the faculty will decide on how and when to bring the proposals into legislation, and effect. ### | ||||||||||