- Graduate
Education in CLASSICS
-
a continuing conversation....
Report of the Task Force on the Relationship between
Graduate Education and the Undergraduate Curriculum
Prepared by Dan Hooley, University of Missouri, and Jim May,
St. Olaf College
Contents
Introduction
This is a radically abridged paraphrase. As such it does no justice to
the often eloquent and insightful contributions of members of this
group. In one very real sense, the virtue of this kind of exercise
comes from listening to others say what they think and (in their own
words) why, rather than from any summarizable "conclusions" that can be
easily passed on. But there is good, too, in trying to bring the
various ruminations into some reasonably concise and communicable form,
and so make the various progresses this group has made a contributing
part of a larger dialogue. To that end, we've prepared the following
provisional summary and hope in it to communicate some of the major
themes of discussion as well as points of general agreement and
disagreement. It should be noted, with respect to the latter, that
sometimes fundamental differences of views did not, as they might have,
result in hardening of perspectives: people in this group listened to
one another and responded in productive ways. Encouraging.
General Terms of the Discussion:
At the
outset we sought to focus discussion on perceived difficulties at
the two-way intersections
between undergraduate programs and graduate schools, that is, problems
facing undergraduate students moving into graduate study and problems
facing fresh PhDs returning to undergraduate institutions.
Our
discussion group was fortunate in representing a wide range of teaching
situations from which to approach these issues: several teach at small,
relatively selective liberal arts colleges, others in larger settings,
ranging in mission from notable research institutions to large, land-
grant universities. We've broken the discussion into three
sections to reflect something of how the responses
interrelated.
Go to the next page in this web | the top of this page | the page
just above this one | the homepage of this
web.