ABSTRACT

Comparative research on higher education in developing and transitional countries is often focused on such issues as access, finance, student mobility and the impact of globalization, but there has been little attention to curriculum and the forces that shape it. Confronting Challenges to the Liberal Arts Curriculum fills an important gap in the literature by examining the context, content, challenges, and successes of implementing liberal arts coursework within undergraduate curriculum. In order to fully understand the place of liberal education in each location, chapter authors have employed a wide lens to investigate the influences upon curricular content in China, India, Mexico, Pakistan, Poland, Russia, South Africa, and Turkey. Thus, this volume explores how curricular content is decided, how educational programs are being structured, and whether countries are viewing higher education as more than just the preparation of students for specialized knowledge.

By providing detailed case studies of these countries at crucial transition points in their higher education systems, each chapter outlines the state of higher education system and the government’s role, the impact of imported models, the presence of a liberal education, the curricular formation, and best examples of successful programs. Ultimately, this volume depicts how global influences have come to rest in developing countries and how market forces far removed from faculty and students have shaped the undergraduate curriculum. This valuable book is of interest to scholars and researchers in Higher Education as well as practitioners working to foster student and faculty exchange and raise awareness of curricular issues.

chapter |23 pages

A Global Framework

Liberal Education in the Undergraduate Curriculum

chapter |24 pages

China

General Education Grounded in Tradition in a Rapidly Changing Society

chapter |27 pages

India

Structural Roadblocks to Academic Reform

chapter |25 pages

Mexico

Higher Education, the Liberal Arts, and Prospects for Curricular Change

chapter |22 pages

Pakistan

Liberal Education in Context, Policy, and Practice

chapter |29 pages

Poland

The Place of Liberal Education in Post-Soviet Higher Education

chapter |24 pages

Russia

Against the Tide, Liberal Arts Establishes a Foothold in Post-Soviet Russia

chapter |26 pages

South Africa

Reimagining Liberal Learning in a Post- Apartheid Curriculum

chapter |25 pages

Turkey

Obstacles to and Examples of Curriculum Reform

chapter |11 pages

Comparative Observations

Problems and Prospects