Christian Liberal Arts Education (CLAE)
From the preface:
鈥淎mid all the variations in the sense of the term聽liberal arts education, one factor is constant. What everyone who uses the term agrees on 鈥 is that a liberal arts education is one which is not aimed at training the student to hold down some specific occupation. Accordingly, when we speak of 鈥榣iberal arts education鈥 in the discussion which follows,鈥 we wish to be understood as meaning non-vocational and non-professional education.鈥 Throughout history, various forms of liberal arts education have in fact been regarded as prerequisite to engaging in the learned professions; and nowadays it is widely held that a liberal arts education is equally indispensable to success in various business professions. But the concern of a liberal arts education is not with communicating the skills and knowledge necessary for engaging in some聽specific vocation or profession. Rather, though its focus is on none, its relevance is to all. It does not point toward the scholar鈥檚 life, nor the diplomat鈥檚, nor the clergyman鈥檚, nor the banker鈥檚. It points toward human life
鈥淎t the outset the Committee wishes to stress that, in what follows, it is discussing a certain sort of聽education, a Christian liberal arts education; not a certain sort of聽college, a Christian liberal arts college. It is not saying that Calvin College ought to offer only a liberal arts education. Calvin College at present offers programs in one and another sort of professional training, and the Committee believes that this is as it should be. We do not regard the aim of professional and vocational training as inferior to, but only as different from, that of liberal arts education. The conspicuous need for a strong Calvinistic liberal arts program must not prevent consideration of the need for other types of educational programs sponsored by the Reformed Christian community, and offered perhaps by the same institution.
鈥溾e believe that the curricula of our various professional programs should incorporate, as far as possible, the 鈥榗ore鈥 of the liberal arts curriculum which we recommend. For it is in this 鈥榗ore鈥 that an integrated Christian view of the major features of reality is communicated to the student.鈥