“We do not need magic to change the world. We carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.”
-J.K. Rowling’s 2008 commencement speech at Harvard
University
As an educator in a college that includes the liberal arts
and sciences as well as education, this quote really resonates with me. And, in
my most optimistic moments, I like to think that this is one of the best things
that an education grounded in the liberal arts provides for students: a capacity
for imagination. An ability to see problems and challenges from multiple
perspectives, and to draw on a wide range of knowledge and experiences to
imagine solutions and ways forward that can lead to a better world. I don’t
have to look very far to find examples of graduates who are doing just that.
At the same time, I have to acknowledge that few students
see it this way as they begin their educational journey in college. Education
for all but a few is instrumental—a means to an end. Get a degree to get a job.
I don’t say that to lament this reality; just to acknowledge it.
Where and when does the capacity to imagine better enter in?
From the vantage point of my academic discipline—biblical
studies—I see the shaping of the human imagination as a major part of what the
biblical writers were about. Through narratives, through psalms, even through
letters, the biblical writers invited their readers to envision a world in
which God was at work. As much as Christians have prioritized doctrine and
right-beliefs over the centuries, it seems to me that the biblical writers were
interested in inviting readers to see themselves in a world in which the God
who created the world was also actively at work. And from there, to imagine
their part as participants in God’s ongoing work of creation and new creation
and to enjoy the realities of what it means to be a child of God. And if that
is one way that “imagining better” is reflected in the discipline of biblical
studies, there are many, many other ways it is reflected in other subjects, all
of which contribute to a well-rounded liberal arts education. Ideally.
A recent essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education laments
the piling up of BS in higher education. The author, sociologist and professor
Christian Smith, lists many things that he considers BS. It is an extensive
list of things that, for the most part, are ingrained features and aspects of
contemporary higher education that distract from or distort the best of what
higher education could be. One could argue with any of his individual laments
about the nuances and complexity of each one, but the collective force of the
list is jarring. It suggests that, taken together, there are some very serious systemic
problems in higher education. But three points of analysis stand out to me.
First, ideas have consequences. The kinds of ideas and
thinking that develop in universities make their way into society over time.
Accordingly, the currents of BS flowing through universities today will become
visible in our public and political life and, Smith claims, actually already
are visible in our current highly polarized and divisive political rhetoric.
Our institutions of higher learning are supposed to be producing educated
citizens and leaders who can participate in the political process and find new
solutions to problems, but apparently they have not done so.
Second, Smith notes that many of the people perpetuating the
BS within institutions of higher education are well-intentioned people who are
doing so unwittingly; with the best of intentions they are participating in a
system that is flawed and by participating in it and contributing to it, they
contribute to the problems.
Third, what is needed are those who can creatively break out
of the current paradigm and foster new forms of higher education that reflect
the ideal of what liberal education is all about. Some combination of
“visionary traditionalism” (I really like that phrase) and “organizational
radicalism” is what is called for. The author suggests we need “people with the
capacity to retrieve and revitalize the best of higher education’s past and
restructure it in ways that are most effective in the future” (Smith, “Higher Ed is Drowning in BS”).
The solution for higher education is not going to be found
in a wholesale return to the past, but it can likely be found in the heart of
what higher education, particularly in the liberal arts tradition, is: critical
reflection and creative thinking. About the past; about the present; about the
future. About problems; about possibilities. Imagining better.
Those of us in higher education need to imagine better for
the sake of higher education so that our students can imagine greater for their
lives, their communities, and the world as a whole. And I think further that those
of us in Christian higher education and at faith-based institutions can look to
the examples of prophets and poets in ages past who, through their writings now
preserved as scripture, invite all of us to imagine better. And perhaps we all
can find this current in different ways in whatever subject area we are
passionate about.
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