Office of the Chancellor
   Chancellor's FYI, October 2005, Greetings continued.
black line for design purposes only. As the great medieval universities engaged in the rediscovery of the once-lost knowledge of ancient Greece, seven traditional liberal arts emerged: They involved language, music, and reasoning but also included what we would, today, call mathematics and science. It is not the particular fields that mattered, though. Success of liberal arts education was measured not by a student’s mastery of subject matter. That was only a means to a more fundamental purpose: transformation of the student herself.
    Liberal arts education — then and today — is education that “liberates from the tyranny of one’s own experience.” The “liberal” means “liberating.”
    The logic is fairly simple: We can only know the world around us by applying certain concepts, definitions, and assumptions. To understand something involves an act of intellectual creation, not mere empirical observation. It is unavoidable.
    Yet, all of us arrive with assumptions, definitions, and concepts that we have unconsciously and uncritically absorbed from a multitude of sources. If, in contrast, we critically examine and consciously choose the concepts and definitions we will use, personally, to know the world, then that is the “liberation from the tyranny of our own experience.”
    So, let me turn to how we at UW-Green Bay approach the liberal education ideal — how we aspire to transform rather than to merely teach students.
    Interdisciplinarity is the inharmonic term we used to use, and the idea is relatively simple: Understanding that is deep, complete, and supportive of effective action requires examination from multiple perspectives. Today, we describe it as “connecting learning to life.”
    All universities, through what they call general education, try to provide students with multiple perspectives. We take a step beyond at UW-Green Bay. The traditional approach is “multidisciplinary.” Subjects are examined within the frameworks of established disciplines.


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Our approach differs. Synthesis is sought by bringing together concepts of multiple disciplines to seek understandings that would not be possible within the limitations of any of the contributing disciplines. A whole is sought that is greater than the sum of the parts.
    I have quickly traced the thousand-year history of liberating education and the special UWGB contribution to that tradition. What is its relevance today?
    I passionately believe that the liberal education is more relevant today than it has ever been. Today, we are preparing people for careers that do not yet exist.
    We are preparing them to be effective members of societies that will be facing challenges — economic, social, cultural — that we do not yet know. How can we be doing that if all we are doing is providing technical skills and information? What we know today, and what we can do today, will have rapidly diminishing relevance.
    To the extent that the presenter in Montreal is correct, ours is a future in which it is all the more important that those being prepared for leadership, whatever sector, know to critically examine concepts and assumptions they receive externally and that they hold internally. That is a critical role for higher education and a special advantage of a UWGB education where every student must complete an interdisciplinary major or minor.
    Do know that connecting learning to life is not just a slogan. It is a well-thought out approach to addressing today’s and tomorrow’s challenges.
    Thank you, as always, for your interest in, and support of, the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.

Bruce Shepard's signature.
Bruce Shepard
Chancellor



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