Academic FAQ's
All FAQ's
How does the PPE degree
differ from other liberal arts
degrees?
It’s more focused. The
Politics, Philosophy, and
Economics degree program has
fewer “distribution
requirements” than most other
liberal arts degree programs.
The range of courses available
as electives is also narrower.
We don’t, for example, offer
courses in anthropology,
psychology, sociology, women’s
studies, ethnic studies, or many
other fields in which liberal
arts colleges these days
frequently offer majors. In some
other “liberal arts” areas we do
offer courses, but they are
arranged into “concentrations,”
rather than full-fledged majors.
For example, our literature
courses are limited to five key
courses in the Literature
Concentration, and the same is
true of Media and Religion. We
have required history courses,
but no history major.
Liberal arts colleges also
usually have a more developed
science curriculum. The King’s
College plans to add a physics
requirement, but we are not
moving towards a program that
offers majors in physics,
chemistry, or biology. (A
student who aspires to attend
medical school, therefore,
should not attend The King’s
College unless he or she plans
to take many extra courses
during the summers and after
graduation.)
The PPE degree program is
also more tightly organized and
integrated than most liberal
arts majors at other colleges.
It is a program for students who
are ready to commit themselves
to a highly structured
undergraduate education. Liberal
arts colleges and universities
often emphasize the large number
of choices students have among
courses. The King’s College, by
contrast, offers only a few
choices. What it offers in the
PPE program is a systematic
approach to learning that will
ensure that, at the end of four
years, you will have achieved a
thorough education in several of
the core academic disciplines.
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