Students and parents increasingly press colleges and universities to demonstrate that multidisciplinary education provides employable skills that result in meaningful careers. They want to know that broad-based curricula will facilitate employment in specialized occupations, with 77 percent of high school students desiring an education that directly prepares them for employment and believing that most employers prefer graduates with career-skill training. This quest for career-driven education, however, contrasts with surveys of employers that show that that the ability to think and inquire independently and to have broad-based knowledge will be essential across numerous careers.

Expertise, Credentials, and the Value of the University
It seems we can’t trust our own credentials or those that we provide to our students. Or perhaps it would be better to say that we have so much confidence


