THE deal is set for the Yale University and the National University of Singapore to set up a liberal arts college here ('Yale-NUS College gets faculty, alumni backing'; April 1).
But the question I want to pose is: Is it worth it?
The college will be offering a degree in liberal arts, which is not exactly a commercially viable qualification.
The fact is, to live and succeed in a competitive country like Singapore, there is more pressure on students such as myself to get a degree that will help us get a stable job, rather than something we would like to do.
The unfortunate truth is that students go to university for the degree, and not for the experience.
Also, the liberal arts 'scene' in Singapore is virtually non-existent. Students who want to actually apply what they learn in the programme will have to migrate to a country with more liberal arts opportunities, something conservative Singapore cannot provide.
Therefore, having a course that binds Western and Eastern cultures becomes moot.
Also, why not go straight to Yale, or any other university in a liberal arts savvy foreign country to study since they will have to migrate anyway? How useful will the students find this programme?
Dhaneesha Ratankumar Chugani (Miss)
wat is liberal arts???
is it something like appearing naked on MBS and claims it's for art???
What is liberal arts? Something like nude paintings issit?
Maybe from our replies, it really isn't worth opening a liberal arts college here.
From what I understand, liberal arts is a 'chapalang' kind of degree where they allow you to take all sorts of subjects from geology to history to biochemistry to finance.
I don't see why they shouldn't start a liberal arts programme, but to be frank, I don't see liberal arts graduates going very far in an economy as small as Singapore's.
the old joke...
The graduate with a Science degree asks, “Why does it work?”
The graduate with an Engineering degree asks, “How does it work?”
The graduate with an Accounting degree asks, “How much will it cost?”
The graduate with a Liberal Arts degree asks, “Do you want fries with that?”
p.s. i will be so fried for that gag
there is just a handful of ppl who study for the sake of it and not going to use tt paper for making big bucks, or any bucks at all.
The truth is that their career opportunities will be severely limited.
It may sound all fair and good to be a jack of all trades, but if I were an employer, who would I hire to be my finance officer, for instance? A liberal arts graduate who took a couple of modules on finance, or a finance graduate from a good business school?
I don't oppose liberal arts per se, but I really hope that those who choose it would not whine about their lack of career opportunities later on.
So Iiberal Arts doesn't means Art as in design?
More to Jack-of-all-trade-but-master-of-none ???
liberal arts is pretty much about critical thinking, definitely no place in singapore...
the prob is jobs they can find aft studies
Liberal Arts provide an all rounded education in covers pure sciences, mathematics, languages, history and social science. The approach to an all rounded education so that when a person graduated that have more common sense than others who simply know nothing but -- Business.
But again in Singapore......its a long way to go.