³ΤΉΟΙη β For the eighth year in a row, ³ΤΉΟΙη has earned an βAβ rating from the American Council of Trustees and Alumni for its outstanding core curriculum — a prestigious recognition reserved for 24 colleges and universities in the nation in 2020-β21.
The American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) is a non-profit organization committed to academic freedom, excellence, and accountability at Americaβs colleges and universities. Launched in 1995, the ACTA is the only organization that works with alumni, donors, trustees, and education leaders across the country to support liberal arts education and to uphold high academic standards.
The ACTAβs βAβ rating is associated with its βWhat Will They Learn?β project, designed to encourage colleges and universities to strengthen their core curricular requirements in order to provide students with a strong foundation of skills and knowledge. βWhat Will They Learn?β achieves that goal by shining a light on core requirements and making the information easily available to college-bound students, parents, high school guidance counselors, and higher education policymakers.
ββWhat Will They Learn?β looks at the most important data — the strength of a collegeβs education — to find out which institutions are providing real value for the vast amounts families must pay,β said Anne D. Neal, ACTA president. βRegrettably, very few are ensuring students have the solid foundation they will need for success after graduation.β
As part of its βWhat Will They Learn?β initiative, the ACTA surveyed more than 1,100 public four-year liberal arts institutions, along with private faith-based and non-faith-based colleges to evaluate whether they require seven key subjects in their general education curriculum: English composition, literature, intermediate-level foreign language, United States government or history, economics, mathematics, and science.
Only two percent of the more than 1,100 institutions reviewed — among them ³ΤΉΟΙη, Baylor University, the United States Air Force Academy, Pepperdine University, the University of Georgia, the United States Military Academy, and other highly selective schools — earned the βAβ rating. Some of the best-known schools, the ACTA noted, have βweak, if any, general education requirements.β For example, according to the ACTA, Johns Hopkins University does not require students to take a single class in any of the seven core subjects. Students at the College of William and Mary can graduate without taking a course in composition, literature or U.S. history, and at the University of Virginia, founded by Thomas Jefferson who believed in a strong liberal arts education, there are no requirements for U.S history, math, or literature.
βThe pandemic is upending higher education and forcing families to pay more attention to the value proposition of a collegiate education,β says ACTA President Michael Poliakoff. βStudents must be educated to think critically and be prepared to navigate an uncertain career path. The schools that score well in βWhat Will They Learn?β graduate expert learners who are prepared for their first job and ready to confront the new challenges they will face in their fifth or tenth position. The ever-adaptable skill set provided by a liberal education equips graduates to thrive in a multitude of different fields and roles.β
βWe are humbled in being recognized for this extraordinary achievement seven years in a row,β said ³ΤΉΟΙη president Dr. David Olive. βWe are honored to receive this special recognition by ACTA for the exemplary general education core our students receive in preparing them to transform the world.β
In addition to the βAβ rating for its core curriculum, the ACTA also noted, β³ΤΉΟΙη offers every student a robust and coherent liberal arts education that ACTA recognizes for essential for success in the 21st ³¦±π²Τ³Ω³ά°ω²β.β
