Top 1200 Liberal Arts College Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Liberal Arts College quotes.
Last updated on November 12, 2024.
I went to NYU to study liberal arts.
Growing up and applying to college, I just imagined that I would study acting. But then, once I went to college, I realized I was more interested in all the aspects of filmmaking as opposed to all the aspects of theater, which is what you would have to do if you studied acting at a liberal arts school. And so I thought, "Oh, I'll meet directors and filmmakers, and I'm an actress, so I'll become friends with them and hopefully be in their movies." And then It worked!
People who come out of the liberal arts don't have an understanding of science and technology, and the people in science and technology have very little experience with liberal arts and the traditions of a liberal democracy.
Josh Radnor is that rare thing: a writer-director who thinks like an actor but still knows how to create a comedy with shape and vision. Liberal Arts is the best movie about college I’ve seen since I don’t know what...Dryly affectionate and super-sharp. Elizabeth Olsen is every inch a star.
I do regret that when I went to college, I didn't have a liberal arts education. I got a BFA in musical theater, so it was a very directed toward what I was doing. I wish that I had expanded my horizons a little bit.
I'm a liberal arts comedian and the definition of liberal arts is all spheres of human knowledge, coexisting, mixing and influencing each other. — © Adam Conover
I'm a liberal arts comedian and the definition of liberal arts is all spheres of human knowledge, coexisting, mixing and influencing each other.
The fine arts thing at college was always too much for me to think about. What I was more involved in was being successful at arts school.
I went to a liberal arts college wherein grading was qualitative and we had to write our own evaluations.
Note too that a faithful study of the liberal arts humanizes character and permits it not to be cruel.
The purpose of a liberal arts education is to learn that a person can like both cats and dogs.
I still think of Heaven as a liberal-arts school.
I'd had the quintessential liberal arts experience, and I came out of college not having a clue of what to do.
I'm a product of an East Coast liberal arts educational system.
Law builds upon and, I should like to claim, is one of the liberal arts. It uses words of persuasion and changing definitions for practical ends.
I do think that a general liberal arts education is very important, particularly in an uncertain changing world
I wanted to go to a liberal arts college, I wanted to have that experience. — © Mandy Patinkin
I wanted to go to a liberal arts college, I wanted to have that experience.
Among all the liberal arts, the first is logic, and specifically that part of logic which gives initial instruction about words. ... [T]he word "logic" has a broad meaning, and is not restricted exclusively to the science of argumentative reasoning. [It includes] Grammar [which] is "the science of speaking and writing correctly-the starting point of all liberal studies."
I love puppies, and I love animals in general. Besides that, I do martial arts: extreme martial arts. I also play real guitar and drums, and sing. And I'm taking some college classes, hoping to major in English and creative writing.
I was a liberal arts junkie and I figured, well, I'll go work for somebody somewhere. All I knew was that I was going to have to come home and figure it out.
I wasn't using college as a stepping stone to law school or some other career. I just wanted a liberal-arts education.
I don't know about liberal bias, but people of a liberal mentality are probably attracted in greater numbers to the arts than people of a conservative mentality.
I ended up going to college for visual arts but moved up to New York after I graduated from college in 2006 and started going gung ho to the Upright Citizens Brigade, and I realized that that was what I was really interested in and what I really wanted to do.
I went to a little liberal-arts college in Missouri called Truman State University.
I went to a liberal arts college, and as part of my background, I was majoring in mathematics and physics.
One of my main reasons for going to college is to try to get a liberal arts background.
I went to school at Radnor High School. And I went to a liberal arts college in St. Louis, Missouri, called Lindenwood College.
I'm a liberal arts junkie.
I had a liberal arts education at Amherst College where I had two majors, mathematics and philosophy.
I wish I'd gone to a small liberal-arts college where I'd have read the great books instead of a large university where I majored in early-childhood education.
I'm a huge fan of the liberal arts approach of teaching you to think, analyze, and communicate, then sending you out into the world to cause trouble.
The role of a liberal arts college within a university is to be a genuine part of that university, giving and responding to the other parts.
I don't think that every child in America is going to necessarily aspire to, you know, a four-year degree from a liberal arts college or a certain kind of life. I think that people should learn to be excellent in the thing that they choose to do.
If the liberal arts do nothing else they provide engaging metaphors for the thinking they displace.
I majored in drama and theater arts at Columbia and was always in acting studio, but that was a liberal arts degree, not a bachelor of arts degree, so I didn't have a traditional conservatory training. There was a lot of reading and a lot of writing involved, and only about 30 percent of my classes were directly theater-related.
I started in a business background, but then it was like, 'you know, I can't do math,' so I changed it to a liberal arts degree and got my Bachelor of Arts in Communications and it made sense.
The arts significantly boost student achievement, reduce discipline problems, and increase the odds students will go on to graduate from college. As First Lady Michelle Obama sums up, both she and the President believe 'strongly that arts education is essential for building innovative thinkers who will be our nation's leaders for tomorrow.'
Bolton School has a great tradition in the liberal arts.
Everybody had to go to some college or other. A business college, a junior college, a state college, a secretarial college, an Ivy League college, a pig farmer's college. The book first, then the work.
To be thoroughly imbued, with the liberal arts refines the manners, and makes men to be mild and gentle in their conduct.
Sculpture and painting are very justly called liberal arts; a lively and strong imagination, together with a just observation, being absolutely necessary to excel in either; which, in my opinion, is by no means the case of music, though called a liberal art, and now in Italy placed even above the other two--a proof of the decline of that country.
There's a lot to be said for an American-style liberal-arts education, which prevents young people from professionalizing right away. — © Elif Batuman
There's a lot to be said for an American-style liberal-arts education, which prevents young people from professionalizing right away.
I was fortunate in that I attended university in Canada in the early 1970s when you could take a true liberal arts degree with no programmes, majors or minors.
The people who fund the arts, provide the arts, and research the arts have all produced a consensus about the value of what they do, which hardly anyone challenges. But do the numbers add up? For all the claims made about the arts, how accurate are they?
The liberal arts are the arts of communication and thinking. 'They are the arts indispensable to further learning, for they are the arts of reading, writing, speaking, listening, figuring.
I decided that I didn't want to spend my time in a liberal arts college.
Amherst is a liberal arts college, committed to providing students with a broad education.
The arts tend to be more liberal. There tends to be more social relevance in the arts.
What is desperately needed... is the skepticism and the sense of history that a liberal arts education provides.
The arts are not a frill. The arts are a response to our individuality and our nature, and help to shape our identity. What is there that can transcend deep difference and stubborn divisions? The arts. They have a wonderful universality. Art has the potential to unify. It can speak in many languages without a translator. The arts do not discriminate. The arts lift us up.
I wasnt using college as a stepping stone to law school or some other career. I just wanted a liberal-arts education.
The basic purpose of a liberal arts education is to liberate the human being to exercise his or her potential to the fullest. — © Barbara M. White
The basic purpose of a liberal arts education is to liberate the human being to exercise his or her potential to the fullest.
Freedom is absolutely necessary for the progress in science and the liberal arts.
For some students, especially in the sciences, the knowledge gained in college may be directly relevant to graduate study. For almost all students, a liberal arts education works in subtle ways to create a web of knowledge that will illumine problems and enlighten judgment on innumerable occasions in later life.
Chadron had a water tower, grain elevators, a tanning salon, a video rental store, a small liberal arts college, a Hardee's, a stoplight, and a curling yellow sign in the pet store window that read, 'Hamsters and Tarantulas Featured Today.'
I'm a classic English liberal. A classical liberal, which is different to the modern interpretation of liberal in America.
My parents had an old-fashioned ideal of college, that four years at a liberal arts college should be a liberal arts education.
It is not so very important for a person to learn facts. For that he does not really need a college. He can learn them from books. The value of an education in a liberal arts college is not learning of many facts but the training of the mind to think something that cannot be learned from textbooks.
The reason that Apple is able to create products like the iPad is because we've always tried to be at the intersection of technology and the liberal arts.
When I entered college, it was to study liberal arts. At the University of Pennsylvania, I studied English literature, but I fell in love with broadcasting, with telling stories about other people's exploits.
I do think that a general liberal arts education is very important, particularly in an uncertain changing world.
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