Since 1914, the Pomona College gates have borne two inscriptions—exhortations from the College’s fourth president, James A. Blaisdell—that remain as relevant to the academic enterprise of the College today as they were when they were carved into stone about a century ago.
The first inscription—Let only the eager, thoughtful and reverent enter here—speaks to the special character of the students and faculty brought together in this place. Pomona aims to be a community of scholars who are eager to learn and act in the world, thoughtful and critical about what they learn, principled about what they do and respectful of the earth and those who inhabit it with them.
The second inscription—They only are loyal to this college who, departing, bear their added riches in trust for mankind—speaks to the purpose of a Pomona education. The College seeks not only to enrich the lives of its students, but also to empower them to use their “added riches” of knowledge, ability and character in ways and for purposes that serve the interests of humankind.
True to both inscriptions, Pomona’s academic program is designed to engage bright, motivated students through a variety of disciplines, methodologies and outlooks; to help them build a strong base of knowledge and critical skills through the study of the liberal arts; to equip them as lifelong learners; and to forge in them the intellectual resilience to deal successfully with a world that is constantly changing. Pomona aims to give each of its graduates the foundation upon which to build an accomplished career and a rich, meaningful life. Beyond this, Pomona also strives to send forth graduates who are eager to contribute to their communities, willing to challenge the status quo, and thoughtful about why and how they do so.
Institutional Learning Goals
Through close faculty, staff, and student interactions within a residential community, Pomona College seeks to produce graduates who possess a depth and breadth of knowledge and the agility of mind to make connections within and across disciplines; The capacity to find, identify, and pursue their intellectual passions; and a commitment to employ their knowledge and skills as leaders, scholars, artists, citizens, and custodians of the natural environment – to bear their added riches in trust for humankind.
General Education Learning Objectives
Recognizing the deeply personal nature of education, and the variety of human knowledge, we have designed our breadth of study requirements to focus not on common content, but on exposing students to the multiple ways of knowing and on providing the means to expand their intellectual experience through interactions with each other.
Upon completion of the general education requirements, Pomona students should be able to engage the work and ideas of others; to articulate nuanced, reflective positions and present them in a sustained, persuasive manner to a specific imagined audience (Critical Inquiry Seminar); and to communicate in a language other than English with basic proficiency in reading, writing, and speaking (Foreign Language). Students will have analyzed, created, or performed works of the human imagination, critically examining form, style, content, and meaning; studied the organization of societies and the factors that motivate the actions of human beings, as individuals and as creators of communities and institutions; investigated the diversity of human experience, thought, and values over time and across cultures and societies; applied scientific ideas and methods to understand the natural world and its inhabitants; and used quantitative analysis or deductive reasoning as tools for problem solving and creating knowledge (Breadth of Study). In addition, students should experience physical activity and appreciate its relationship to health and wellness (Physical Education).
The Curriculum
Reflecting the principle that a liberal arts education should be both broad and deep, as well as responsive to student interests, Pomona’s curriculum comprises three important components. First, the General Education Program provides a broad and flexible foundation for every Pomona student. Second, the major field of study ensures that every student explores at least one discipline in sufficient depth to understand its methodologies and opportunities. And finally, elective courses permit students to follow their own curiosity wherever it may lead them. Each student’s individual program is chosen in consultation with an academic adviser and informed by a broad array of advising resources. General Education begins with the Critical Inquiry seminar for first-year students and continues with requirements for breadth of study, foreign language and physical education. Required for all first-year students, the Critical Inquiry seminar introduces students to our highest educational beliefs: that established truths and theories should be interrogated and that students should develop their skills in thoughtful reading, logical reasoning and graceful writing. Bridging the traditional boundaries of academic disciplines to focus on such special topics as “The Idea of Money,” “Mathematics and Music,” and “The Changing Climate,” each Critical Inquiry seminar includes no more than 15 students and is taught by a Pomona College faculty member.
The Breadth of Study Requirements are designed to encourage exploration while providing significant freedom of choice. Students take at least one course in each of five areas: Creative Expression; Social Institutions and Human Behavior; History, Values, Ethics and Cultural Studies; Physical and Biological Sciences; and Mathematical Reasoning. In consultation with their advisers, students are free to make their own selections, based upon their interests and curiosities, but they are also encouraged to choose courses that will prove challenging and thought-provoking. Because the system enables students to pursue questions of personal interest from a variety of disciplinary and theoretical frameworks, it also frees them to follow extended paths of inquiry that a more restrictive general education program might not permit.
In 2006, the faculty of the College endorsed a new component to its General Education Program dealing with the study of the Dynamics of Difference and Power. Enrollment in a DDP course is not a requirement but an aspiration that all students are urged to fulfill. A DDP course is one that uses class, ethnicity, gender, race, religion and/or sexuality as categories of analysis and that examines power at the interpersonal, local, national and/or international levels. For a complete list of all DDP courses and their descriptions, see Dynamics of Difference & Power Courses section of this catalog. For a list of DDP courses offered in a particular semester, please use the online course schedule on My.Pomona.edu and search for the course area “PO DDP Courses”.
If the principal purpose of General Education is to broaden the focus of a Pomona education, the purpose of the major, by contrast, is to require students to delve deeply into a chosen field. With 47 majors to choose from, some Pomona students opt for traditional disciplines—biology, English, history, economics—while others elect one of an expansive array of interdisciplinary majors, including regional and cultural studies as well as such emerging fields as environmental analysis, neuroscience and media studies. Whatever their major, students work closely with the faculty in their chosen field and ultimately complete a senior capstone exercise, usually including a seminar and a thesis or other senior project. Broad, deep and rich, Pomona’s curriculum is complemented by the curricula of the four other undergraduate and two graduate institutions of The Claremont Colleges. Students may register for courses at any one of these other schools, expanding their options and the faculty expertise available to them.
The Faculty
Like their students, Pomona faculty are diverse in background and scholarly interests. All committed teachers of undergraduates, they frequently experiment with new approaches and materials, tailoring instruction to the changing world beyond their classrooms or laboratories. Astronomy instructors and students may stargaze from the College’s one-meter telescope on nearby Table Mountain, for example, while those in the social sciences may conduct research in collaboration with local schools or grassroots organizations. A ratio of eight students to each faculty member allows for small classes, including many seminars centered on intensive discussion, as well as student-teacher teamwork.
Pomona faculty are not only devoted teachers but also engaged scholars who conduct research comparable in quality to that of their peers at major universities and who often bring that research directly into the classroom. Unlike large universities, where faculty work primarily with graduate students, Pomona encourages instructors to collaborate with undergraduates on research in the library, archives, laboratory or field. External and internal grants support this hands-on experience as a complement to classroom instruction and as preparation for graduate or professional work.
“The center of a college,” wrote James A. Blaisdell, Pomona’s fourth president, “is in great conversation, and out of the talk of college life springs everything else.” Today, Pomona remains committed to the ideal of the residential college, where classroom conversations can be rejoined over dinner, in a dormitory, or while strolling across campus, and where students are challenged daily to express themselves both in and out of class. By encouraging interaction among members of the College community, Pomona College seeks to locate the ongoing exchange of ideas at the heart of its educational mission. |