This is a poorly  written article nonetheless with a message worth  
thinking about
 
BR note
 
 
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Purpose of College is Not to Get a Job, is to  Instill Ethical 
Responsibilities, Say Presidents of Catholic University, Yeshiva  University

 
 
 
By _Samuel Smith_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/samuel-smith/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
February 5, 2015|12:09  pm


 
The presidents from three leading American faith-based universities 
convened  Wednesday to discuss the role of faith-based colleges in an 
increasingly 
secular  society and agreed that faith-based schools, more so than secular 
schools,  stress the importance of living lives filled with morals, ethics 
and  responsibility to others. 
John Garvey of Catholic University of America and Richard Joel of the the 
New  York-based and Jewish Yeshiva University participated in a Wednesday 
night  discussion on the state of higher education and the calling of 
faith-based  universities, which was moderated and hosted by Baylor University 
President and  Chancellor Ken Starr at the National Press Club. 
Although all the presidents agreed that  it is imperative for colleges  to 
provide students with the skills and knowledge needed to be successful in a  
career, what is equally as important and often overlooked by state and 
secular  schools in today's secular environment, is making sure that students 
are  prepared to make tough moral and ethical choices when they are faced with 
many  of life's tough dilemmas. 
"The Jewish tradition believes that there is [are] no bad ideas [huh?],  
that you should explore everything but that you bring a moral, ethical and  
purposeful judgement to how we relate to those ideas," Joel said. "Ideas are  
never the enemy, it is how we abuse or pervert those ideas ….[nonsense]  We  
have enough confidence in our ethos and our values to believe that our 
ideals  can confront ideas and hopefully shape them."
 

Joel further added that the responsibility of faith-based schools goes 
deeper  than just instilling morals and righteousness, but also to keep alive 
the idea  that humans beings are more than just the top of the food chain. 
Joel explained  that Yeshiva University strives on the motto that "education is 
meant to Ennoble  and Enable." 
"I think it comes to the initial conceptualization of the worth of a human  
and whether we are simply the highest animals in the food chain or whether 
there  is something noble about us or sacred. Do we teach them that they are 
supposed  to do more than graze, make money and go shopping?" Joel asked. 
"I understand  that in America, unless you choose to go to a faith-based or 
mission-driven  university, you want to go somewhere where you don't have to 
buy into an  orthodoxy. It seems to me that we have gone a little too far to 
divorce that  sense of struggling with the essence of the human being and 
saying that it is  too dangerous in our pluralistic society to deal with it, 
so just deal with arts  and science." 
Garvey agreed with Joel's notion that education's role is to "ennoble and  
enable" and put it into his own context of providing "wisdom and virtue." 
"I am fond of saying that the point of education is to help our students  
advance in wisdom and virtue. These are both things that we do and they are  
connected to one another in a surprising way," Garvey said. "I like 
Aristotle's  phrase that 'when we are educating people, virtue makes us aim at 
the 
right mark  and wisdom tells us how to choose the proper means.' 
"What he means is when we are learning about subjects like the history of  
capitalism, or the economy, or the environment, or mercantilism, we cannot 
make  proper judgements about these without having an ethical foundation to 
make our  judgements," Garvey added. "Our judgements will be better or worse 
depending on  what kind of people we are." 
Joel said another major part of the Yeshiva education experience is making  
sure students gain an understanding of their responsibility to help the 
less  fortunate. He explained that Yeshiva students have helped the distraught 
people  in Haiti, taught middle school science to inner city Dominicans, and 
taught  English to people in the South of Israel. 
"The student experience at Yeshiva University is one of… wholeness or  
integrity. The goal at Yeshiva University is to provoke the student to have his 
 
or her pieces come together," Joel said. "'My intellectual piece, my 
dreaming  piece, my service to society piece, my aspiration for career, my 
communal piece,  how do I get whole so I get to have that great gift, which is  
responsibility?'" 
Garvey explained that the student life at Catholic University is in many 
ways  similar to that of Yeshiva, adding that Catholic University students 
also go on  mission trips. 
Starr said that at Baylor University there is a Christian calling to ensure 
 that the students understand the concept of maintaining a "caring 
community" and  living to serve the needs of others. 
"The creation of a very purposeful community, what we call the caring  
community, is vibrant and evident. It makes for a joyful place that sets us  
apart in terms of degrees of happiness," Starr told reporters after the event.  
"We talk about 'live life greatly.' That means in our Christian tradition,  
'don't live for yourself.'"

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