Hampshire College to Transform Curriculum and Student Experience Around Contemporary Challenges

AMHERST, MA – Hampshire College has announced a bold new direction, fundamentally reshaping the liberal arts to match today’s needs. Three essential elements define this inventive approach:

  • Urgent. Students today are demanding and leading change, long before they arrive at college. Responding to students’ desires to create new knowledge that can meet the challenges of the 21st century, Hampshire is reorganizing itself around critical questions. As the pressing issues of our time evolve, so will our curriculum and structures, generating a continually innovating college.
  • Unbounded. Successful innovators and changemakers easily cross the boundaries of specialization and expertise. Hampshire is removing all barriers across fields of study to create a truly transformative liberal arts college: no majors, no departments, no curricular divisions, liberating students to formulate questions that have never been asked before.
  • Entrepreneurial. Asking the best questions and pursuing innovative outcomes require the ability to identify a challenge, mobilize resources, integrate diverse perspectives, collaborate, and successfully propose a solution. Hampshire’s new curriculum will ensure that students can take a project from idea, to investigation, concept, and completion.

“We challenged ourselves to deepen our mission to transform higher education by once again asking what sort of education contemporary students need,” says President Ed Wingenbach. “Redesigning Hampshire in this revolutionary way is a powerful, distinctive innovation that answers pressing challenges that no other college has committed itself to meet.

The complex problems of the 21st century cannot be addressed within the traditional silos of academic departments and majors. From climate change to economic and social inequality, from artificial intelligence to strengthening the vitality of the arts, the challenges of today’s world are interconnected and require multiple perspectives, methods of inquiry, and an entrepreneurial mindset beyond what a traditional liberal arts education can provide.

"Hampshire College has done what everyone says cannot be done: it has taken seriously the challenges students face today and remade itself to prepare students to face those challenges.” Says Dr. Cathy Davidson, founding director of the Futures Initiative at the Graduate Center, CUNY, and author of The New Education: How To Revolutionize the University To Prepare Students for a World in Flux. “As someone who watches educational change, I can say definitively that this is the most profound, extensive, and exciting transformation I have seen anywhere. Most of higher education prepares students for the challenges of higher education. What is astonishing about Hampshire’s new vision is that, in every way, it is designed to prepare each and every student, in any field and with any ambition, for the challenges both in school and beyond."

Hampshire’s new model—built on the college’s legacy of rejecting passive lectures and exams, restrictive departments, and prescribed majors—will invite students to ask big questions and draw on approaches from any field in order to find answers. Students will have the freedom to design their own academic program with the guidance of faculty and staff, a hallmark of the Hampshire experience. The most successful artists, entrepreneurs, researchers, and activists know that the greatest solution to any complex problem comes from an ability to look beyond assumptions, identify interdependencies, and create disruption. It is this synthesis in Hampshire’s new model that expresses the best ideals and practical relevance of a liberal arts education.

The new framework was developed with input from hundreds of Hampshire community members coordinated by members of a campus Academic Innovation Planning Group, who reviewed institutional research from recent years and hosted five weeks of open campus meetings this fall.

Hampshire’s Board of Trustees voted to endorse the new direction on Saturday, October 12, after the faculty voted last Thursday, October 10, to build the new curriculum and to collaborate with the college’s staff on its development and implementation. The new model will be built this academic year and implemented for its incoming class of Fall 2020, as the college celebrates its 50th anniversary.

About Hampshire College
Hampshire College is a private liberal arts college in Amherst, MA. It was opened in 1970 as an experiment in alternative education, in association with four other colleges in Massachusetts’ Pioneer Valley: Amherst College, Smith College, Mount Holyoke College, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Together they have since been known as the Five Colleges or the Five College Consortium. The college is widely known for its alternative curriculum, socially liberal politics, focus on portfolios rather than distribution requirements, and its reliance on narrative evaluations instead of grades and GPAs. In some fields, it is among the top undergraduate institutions in percentage of graduates who enroll in graduate school. Sixty-five percent of its alumni have at least one graduate degree and a quarter have founded their own business or organization. It is ranked #39 among U.S. colleges and universities by the percentage of graduates who go on to earn a doctorate degree according to National Science Foundation data. Learn more at www.hampshire.edu.

Featured

  • Purdue University

    Purdue Celebrates Grand Opening of Large Esports Facility

    Purdue University has officially opened a new gaming lounge for students training and competing in esports as well as casual gamers. The institution partnered with Dell Technologies to outfit the 2,000-square-foot-space with Alienware gaming equipment.

  • LocknCharge Launches App-Based Smart Locker System

    LocknCharge, a developer of mobile phone charging, storing, security, and technology management solutions, recently launched the new FUYL Enhanced Smart Locker System, according to a news release. The app-based kiosk allows self-serve access to devices while also providing full security and control.

  • Colorado State University Starts Construction on Liberal Arts Building Renovation

    Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colo., recently began construction on a $137-million renovation project to one of its largest academic buildings, according to local news. Last week, one of the three wings of Clark Hall (“Clark B”) was demolished to clear the way for a ground-up replacement.

  • University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Debuts New Chemistry Building

    The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in Milwaukee, Wis., recently celebrated the grand opening of a new Chemistry Building, according to a news release. The facility measures in at 163,400 square feet, stands four stories, and has the capacity for about 5,000 chemistry and biochemistry students.

Digital Edition