Just What Is A Liberal Arts Program?

Most liberal arts programs in most schools around the U.S. focus on English, literature, history, psychology, political science, as well as several other “general” subjects. While these subjects may not be where you will spend your career, they can open for you a world of ideas through which you can choose a specific direction to go with your college degree.

When you think about the amount of money that is spent on a college education, it is best to know that the money is going to be spent for a worthwhile cause. Some, who find themselves pursuing a career that they really don’t enjoy realize that they have spent a lot of money to be where they are – so they stay there, even though they think they would be happier in another career.

Taking the first year or two of college to follow the liberal arts pursuits may just lead you in a direction you never before even dreamed of, much less thought you could accomplish. Let’s say that you enjoy working with children but you really aren’t sure about teaching a whole room full of them at one time. At the same time, you understand a lot about music but you don’t consider yourself an outstanding performer. There are careers that will allow you to pursue both your interests on a different level. You can study to become a music therapist, working individually with children who have been affected by disease or even by harsh life events that have caused them to shut down emotionally. Music therapy can open new doors for those children. What about speech therapy or movement therapy? Those ideas can all be discovered and pursued as you take music history classes and psychology classes that come under the heading of a liberal arts program.

After a couple of years in the basic program, you might have found your niche so that you can then take the specialized classes that will lead to a fulfilling career. Since with a college degree, everyone is required to take some liberal arts courses, you may well find yourself in a unique career that doesn’t have as many applicants as other careers, which will then have employers vying for your attention instead of the other way around.

Don’t knock those classes that you have to take because you are enrolled in college. Money spent wisely on those classes may just lead you to become something that you never even imagined before. And it may be as simple as taking some of the things you already enjoy and honing them for future use in a career that satisfies you and helps others.