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A Practical Education - Why Liberal Arts Majors Make Great Employees (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R567
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A Practical Education - Why Liberal Arts Majors Make Great Employees (Hardcover)
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List price R662
Loot Price R567
Discovery Miles 5 670
You Save R95 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The liberal arts major is often lampooned: lacking in "skills,"
unqualified for a professional career, underemployed. But studying
for the joy of learning turns out to be surprisingly practical.
Unlike career-focused education, liberal education prepares
graduates for anything and everything-and nervous "fuzzy major"
students, their even more nervous parents, college career center
professionals, and prospective employers would do well to embrace
liberal arts majors. Just look to Silicon Valley, of all places, to
see that liberal arts majors can succeed not in spite of, but
because of, their education. A Practical Education investigates the
real-world experiences of graduates with humanities majors, the
majors that would seem the least employable in Silicon Valley's
engineering-centric workplaces. Drawing on the experiences of
Stanford University graduates and using the students' own accounts
of their education, job searches, and first work experiences,
Randall Stross provides heartening demonstrations of how
multi-capable liberal arts graduates are. When given a first
opportunity, these majors thrive in work roles that no one would
have predicted. Stross also weaves the students' stories with the
history of Stanford, the rise of professional schools, the
longstanding contention between engineering and the liberal arts,
the birth of occupational testing, and the popularity of computer
science education to trace the evolution in thinking about how to
prepare students for professional futures. His unique blend of
present and past produces a provocative exploration of how best to
utilize the undergraduate years. At a time when institutions of
higher learning are increasingly called on to justify the tangible
merits of the liberal arts, A Practical Education reminds readers
that the most useful training for an unknowable future is the
universal, time-tested preparation of a liberal education.
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