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International Membership

Connect to the world of higher education

With AACRAO membership you'll be connected to more than 11,000 members from institutions around the world. Facilitate your professional development by attending discounted meetings, gaining complimentary subscriptions to our College & University journal and more.

Why should you join? From professional development opportunities to forging connections that will help you in setting down career stones, there's more than one reason. 

Apply for International Membership

Is your institution already a member? Apply to join the roster.
Want to join independently? Apply without an institution.

 

Annual Membership Price: Starting at $302

Requirements: YOU MUST BE AT A POSTSECONDARY DEGREE-GRANTING INSTITUTION OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES RECOGNIZED BY THE MINISTRY OF EDUCATION OR APPROPRIATE MINISTRY IN YOUR COUNTRY AND AUTHORIZED TO GRANT DEGREES.

Develop Professionally

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AACRAO Edge

When education standards change, new credentials are awarded, or foreign education systems are reorganized, AACRAO EDGE utilizes the expertise of the International Education Standards Council (IESC) to review and update our database.

Professional Competencies

Work on your skills like diversity and inclusion, interpretation and application of institutional and external data, and leadership. We have the tools for you.

Online Learning

From free webinars to self-paced on-demand learning, AACRAO's online learning covers a variety of subjects—technology, strategic enrollment management, admissions, FERPA, transfer, credential evaluation, and international education—and allow you to engage with the presenters and instructors.

Take the next step in your career

AACRAO's Career Navigator is a wealth of job postings and resources for training. 

Gain Recognition

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Get Published

AACRAO's professional journals College & University and SEM Quarterly are always accepting articles and have a wide circulation base.

Research Opportunities

Leverage the expertise of our over 11,000 members and contribute to one of the premier sources of practice related research within the global higher education community. 

Join a committee

Do work you're passionate about, with support and mentoring from fellow members. From Caucuses to specialized topics, it's all one community, no matter where in the world your institution is located. 


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AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Selling a Liberal Arts Education in a STEM World

Apr 2, 2019, 12:59 PM
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Summary : Liberally educated students can go farther, data shows. Do families know it?
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With the emerging focus on STEM/STEAM training and education, a liberal arts education has fallen out of favor with politicians, parents, students, and media. That popularity shift may be due, in part, to a misconception about skill demand and employment potential, as well as a fundamental misunderstanding of what a liberal arts education entails.

In her Monday session at the Annual Meeting, Dr. Jacquelyn D. Elliott, President, enrollmentFUEL, and Chief Enrollment Specialist with Marion Military Institute (as well as 2019 Recipient of AACRAO’s Award for Excellence in International Education), talked with attendees about how to define, package, and sell a liberal arts education.

Often, people believe that liberal arts graduates can’t get jobs, and that liberal arts is a dying field, she noted. They believe students need a STEM field major because technology is where the opportunity is. However, Elliot said, that assumption is based on a misapprehension of what liberal arts means and what employers want.

What are liberal arts?
“Part of the problem is that families don’t understand what ‘liberal arts’ means,” Elliott said. “We have a job in the messaging. How do we clarify and do a better job telling them.”

Liberal arts isn’t a single discipline, it’s a program of education. Rather than developing specialized knowledge in a single field, liberal arts degrees require students to obtain a broad base of general education in a variety of fields, including language arts, mathematics, and social and physical sciences. It doesn’t exclude disciplines such as engineering or computer science, but rounds them out with a wider range of educational experiences. This allows for integrative, innovative thinking and professional advancement.

What employers want
Despite the media focus on growth in the tech sector, employers continue to value skills that can be acquired through liberal arts programs but not through STEM specialized programs, including:

  • 93% say demonstrated capacity to think critically, communicate clearly and solve complex problems is more important than the major

  • More than nine in ten say they must hire someone who can demonstrate ethical judgment and integrity, intercultural skills, and desire for continued learning

  • 80% of employers agree that regardless of major, every student needs a broad knowledge of liberal arts and science

“Narrow learning is not enough,” Elliott said. “If we can shape our messaging and marketing around what employers really want, we can help turn the corner.”

Professional development potential: The ‘wow’ moment
In discussion about how to develop messaging that conveys these truths, one audience member noted that her institution strives to “prepare students for lifetime vocation, not just their first job.”

That messaging is on point for marketing liberal arts degrees, Elliott noted, because skills developed through liberal arts are those that prepare students for promotion and advancement.

Mobility potential. Elliott described the following revelation as a ‘wow’ moment for many prospects: “Most employers believe STEM majors are prepared for entry-level positions, while liberal arts are prepared for advancement in the career.”

Although STEM majors may make more money right out of school, over their lifetime, liberal arts majors make an average of $40,000/year more during their peak earning years, because their education has prepared them to develop into leadership and management roles, rather than staying in technical roles. The benefit of a liberal arts degree is career mobility, not stability.

“Liberally-educated people redefine themselves and move up the ladder because they have wide skill set to draw upon across their careers,” Elliott said.

And, in fact, 70 percent of STEM degree holders are not employed in a STEM-related field, undermining the claim that STEM specialties are easy funnels into employment.

Rapport sector. In addition, liberal education skills are in very high demand in the current economy.

“The rapport sector or empathy economy is creating most jobs in the U.S. right now,” Elliott said. “That’s heavily dominated by liberal arts.” Citing the book You Can Do Anything: The Surprising Power of a "Useless" Liberal Arts Education by George Anders, Elliott described the example of Open Table, the online restaurant reservation service. To run the app requires just 14 people in technical positions but 100 people with expertise in communication.

“There’s a huge demand for people who can humanize technology,” Elliott said. That doesn’t mean we don’t need STEM folks, but that the two skills go hand-in-hand.

What are you doing to sell to families?
Elliott offered recommendations for those seeking students interested in liberal arts, including:

  • Purchase those names specifically and tailor/segment your messaging accordingly.

  • Focus on benefits (not features) of education. For example, if you have a top-rated facility, convey how that benefits your students.

  • Emphasize the scaffolding power of co-curricular experiences (such as having learning outcomes for residential life) to support liberal education.

  • Know your statistics, understand the research, and believe in the power of liberal education.


Categories :
  • AACRAO Annual Meeting
  • Admissions and Recruitment
  • Communications Plan
  • Enrollment Goals
  • Marketing Research
  • Meetings, Workshops, and Trainings
  • Student Recruitment
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