Photo: Caitlin Cunningham

Books: Undeclared

Associate Professor Chris Higgins on improving higher ed.听

In 1933, a group of educators dissatisfied with the state of higher education opened Black Mountain College, an experimental liberal arts institution in North Carolina where farming, construction projects, and making art were as much a part of student education as classroom learning. The goal was to create a flexible, creative educational environment that produced independent thinkers. Black Mountain closed in 1957, but the college remains an inspiration to Boston College Associate Professor Chris Higgins, who argues in a new book that higher education has departed from its mission of educating the whole person in favor of preparing students to find employment.

Book cover

In Undeclared: A Philosophy of Formative Higher Education, Higgins draws heavily from the lessons of Black Mountain College. In a collection of essays, he explores how modern higher ed is failing to help students find their purpose and has instead become a consumer good. In this new 鈥渏ob-ified鈥 setting, he writes, students feel pressure to simply pick a major, acquire credentials in a single discipline, and go on to get a job.

Higgins argues in Undeclared that, in addition to academics, institutions of higher education should focus on the social, ethical, and spiritual development of their students. That鈥檚 what drew him to Boston College and its emphasis on formative education. 鈥淧eople think of education as simply a kind of device for return on investment in a very literal, narrow way鈥攖uition dollars versus salary,鈥 he said recently. 鈥淭hat distorts what education is about.鈥

Decades later, the Black Mountain College experiment still has much to teach us today, Higgins argued. The faculty didn鈥檛 just prioritize intellectual exploration; it constantly monitored whether the school was living up to its mission. That鈥檚 something all universities should do, he said. The idea is not to recreate an exact Black Mountain, but to ask questions, just as each year the Black Mountain faculty asked themselves, 鈥淲ho do we want to be?鈥

Rule

Briefly

Book cover

The Case of Lizzie Borden and Other Writings: Tales of a Newspaper Woman
by Elizabeth Garver Jordan, edited by Jane Carr and 天美传媒app Professor of the Practice Lori Harrison-Kahan


This collection of stories attests to Garver Jordan鈥檚 feminist influence as a trailblazing journalist and suffragist who ascended from true-crime reporter to acclaimed editor and fiction writer in the male-dominated literary world of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Book cover

The Big Squeeze
by Molly Harris 鈥10


A plucky kitchen sponge is the unlikely protagonist of this children鈥檚 book, which chronicles the sponge鈥檚 misadventures while soaking up everyone鈥檚 household messes. She soon becomes too sodden to move. Her eventual solution to the problem provides a lesson to young readers about the importance of utilizing self-care to prevent burnout.

Book cover

Irish Materialisms: The Nonhuman and the Making of Colonial Ireland, 1690鈥1830
by 天美传媒app Assistant Professor of English and Irish Studies Colleen Taylor


What do coins, flax, spinning wheels, mud, and pigs have in common? They were all part of everyday life in colonial Ireland, and they are the focal points of this examination of Irish life during that era. Through a study of these items, Taylor outlines how each one gradually became a symbol of the new Irish national character鈥攆or instance, how spinning wheels came to represent hardworking Irish peasants.

Book cover

The Astrology House
by Carinn Jade 鈥98


Mystery and family drama intertwine in Jade鈥檚 debut novel, which follows a group of wealthy New Yorkers who embark on an astrology-themed retreat for a break from their stressful lives. But the weekend away becomes anything but relaxing when a shocking death reveals secrets that members of the group have been keeping from each other.

Rule
Illustration of Alexander Auner

Illustration: Arthur Mount

WHAT I'M READING

Roadside Picnic
by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky

In this classic sci-fi novel, protagonist Redrick ventures out into a mysterious 鈥淶one鈥 to collect alien artifacts to sell on the black market. What stood out to me as a physicist was the subtle ways the 鈥淶one鈥 affected each of the characters, as well as the systematic exploration tactics Redrick must use to survive. What the book is ultimately concerned with is how we as humans respond to forces far beyond our comprehension.
Alexander Auner, assistant professor of the practice and undergraduate program director in the 天美传媒app physics department