This product is usually dispatched within 1 week
Free CA delivery on orders $40 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Research-intensive universities have long struggled to reconcile the imperative of specialized learning with the need for a broader, more liberal education. Combining Two Cultures provides a comprehensive account of a degree program at a distinguished Canadian university, McMaster, aimed at accomplishing this synthesis. This innovative program has stood up well over more than two decades. It has a curriculum balanced between arts and sciences and is committed to developing broadly applicable intellectual skills, above all those that underlie scholarly inquiry into questions of importance to students and to the society they live in. It attempts to harmonize the excitement of exploring a broad range of fields with students' needs to meet the requirements for advanced study in professional and academic graduate disciplines. This book offers insights into the challenges of planning and establishing a program of this kind. Brief personal reflections from many of the program's graduates, firsthand observations from current students, and instructors' accounts of their experiences give a vivid sense of what the program has meant to its participants.
Published | Sep 15 2004 |
---|---|
Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 300 |
ISBN | 9780761829287 |
Imprint | University Press of America |
Dimensions | 221 x 184 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Since C.P. Snow coined a famous term for an old dichotomy?namely, the Two Cultures?attempts have been made to overcome the great divide between the humanities and the sciences in the modern university and in modern culture. Most attempts have failed topay anything more than lipservice?the divide remains enormous. But since 1981, McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, has put its money where its mouth is by offering the justifiably prestigious undergraduate degree programme (students selected from amongst some of the best in the country) combines a thorough liberal arts and humanities schooling intertwined witha comprehensive science education (including math, physics, and biology). Unique in its origins, the Arts and Science programme has becomea model for fully integrated science and liberal arts programmes across North America. 'Combining Two Cultures', collectively written to commemorate the 25th year of this exemplary programme, brings together past and present Arts and Sciencesfounders, instructors, directors and commentators to explore in detail the birth, history,. structure, meaning, place, and future of this uniquely integrated programme? its instructional philosophy, the structure of its instruction, and its place in the u
Gordon McOuat, Director of the History of Science and Technology Program, King's College, Halifax
Since C.P. Snow coined a famous term for an old dichotomy-namely, the "Two Cultures"-attempts have been made to overcome the great divide between the humanities and the sciences in the modern university and in modern culture. Most attempts have failed to pay anything more than lipservice-the divide remains enormous. But since 1981, McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, has put its money where its mouth is by offering the justifiably prestigious undergraduate degree programme (students selected from amongst some of the best in the country) combines a thorough "liberal arts and humanities" schooling intertwined witha comprehensive science education (including math, physics, and biology). Unique in its origins, the "Arts and Science" programme has become a model for fully integrated science and liberal arts programmes across North America. 'Combining Two Cultures', collectively written to commemorate the 25th year of this exemplary programme, brings together past and present "Arts and Sciences" founders, instructors, directors and commentators to explore in detail the birth, history,. structure, meaning, place, and future of this uniquely integrated programme- its instructional philosophy, the structure of its instruction, and its place in the university and body politic. The excitement and skill of their mission jump from every page. (An interesting and delightful addition to the book is the set of responses from graduates of "Arts and Sciences" in their own words showing the program's success at producing well-rounded, confident, and socially engaged public intellectuals.) 'Combining Two Cultures' will be of much interest to those concerned about the fate of education in our modern culture, to educators and students alike, to those who are engaged in similar and hopeful enterprises, and especially tho those who, like C.P. Snow, see enormous value-indeed, urgency-in the overcoming of the 'Two Cultures' dichotomy in our modern world.
Gordon McOuat, Director of the History of Science and Technology Program, King's College, Halifax
Your School account is not valid for the Canada site. You have been logged out of your account.
You are on the Canada site. Would you like to go to the United States site?
Error message.