Liberal Arts Programs Boston MA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Liberal Arts Programs. You will find informative articles about Liberal Arts Programs, including "Liberal Arts Degrees: Choosing a College and Career". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Boston, MA that can help answer your questions about Liberal Arts Programs.

Suffolk University
(617) 573-8000
8 Ashburton Place
Boston, MA
Emmanuel College - Boston, MA
617-735-9715
400 The Fenway
Boston, MA
Lesley University
(617) 868-9600
29 Everett Street
Cambridge, MA
Eastern Nazarene College
(617) 745-3000
23 East Elm Avenue
Quincy, MA
Bentley University
(781) 891-2000
175 Forest Street
Waltham, MA
Northeastern University
(617) 373-2000
150 Richards Hall
Boston, MA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(617) 253-1000
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA
Harvard University
(617) 495-1000
8 Garden Street
Cambridge, MA
Mount Ida College
(617) 928-4500
777 Dedham Street
Newton, MA
Lasell College
(617) 243-2000
1844 Commonwealth Avenue
Newton, MA
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Liberal Arts Degrees: Choosing a College and Career

Vassar College

A liberal arts degree is such a versatile degree, that it can prepare you for dozens of distinct careers from archaeologist to legislative researcher to United Nations staff. It may be difficult to believe, but this unique degree is nothing new and it has never really been considered an “experimental” or “alternative” degree. Liberal arts study has been around since ancient Greek and Roman times, but liberal arts colleges didn’t begin to multiply in North America until the early 1800s. In medieval European Universities, liberal arts covered seven subject areas including arithmetic, astronomy, geometry, grammar, logic, music, and rhetoric.

Today, there are more than 200 liberal arts colleges across the United States. These liberal arts degree programs promote the study of history, languages, literature, mathematics, philosophy, and science—subjects that form the basis of a general or “liberal” education. Many institutions describe the liberal arts curriculum as the study of three main branches of knowledge including: the social sciences, humanities (literature, language, philosophy, the fine arts, and history), and the physical and biological sciences. In addition to studying the three main branches of knowledge, liberal arts colleges allow students to focus on a particular major. Typical liberal arts majors include:

  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • History
  • Languages (French, German, Russian, Spanish)
  • Liberal Studies
  • Literature or other Humanities
  • Philosophy
  • Physics
  • Psychology
  • Social Sciences
  • Sociology

While the liberal arts curriculum is basically the same at all liberal arts colleges, these unique colleges come in all shapes and sizes. Liberal arts colleges may be secular, religiously affiliated, gender-specific, public or private, urban, rural, residential, independent or part of a larger college or university.

Job Interview

Graduates with a liberal arts degree are an attractive option for employers mainly employers feel that liberal arts graduates have developed the skills necessary to deal with today’s evolving career world. Employers also see a liberal arts graduate as an individual that has demonstrated the ability to learn and become successful in today’s working world. Liberal arts graduates have proven that they have the ability to uncover problems, find solutions, and implement them.

Although liberal arts degrees have benefits on a personal, community, and career level, this type of degree also has benefits on a financial level. Liberal arts graduates entering professional fields can expect starting salaries ranging from $38,620 (anthropologists and archaeologists) up to $80,560 (political scientists). Earnings increase significantly with master of liberal arts degree (MLA).

If you are interested in obtaining a liberal arts degree, you should start by contacting one of the top schools for liberal arts. The following colleges ranked high on U.S. News & World Report’s National Liberal Arts Rankings for 201...

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