Press ReleasesGeneral Education
Statement on UPenn’s Removal of Shakespeare from the English Department—Literally and Figuratively
WASHINGTON, DC—In response to the student-led and faculty-supported removal of William Shakespeare’s portrait […]
ACTA probes the extent to which today’s English majors are required to take courses on Shakespeare’s work. While at one point such requirements were common, this report reveals that today they are not. Of the 70 colleges researched by ACTA–private and public, large and small, from the Washington, D.C. area and on to the rest of the country—only 15 require their English majors to take a course on the Bard. ACTA also points out that as Shakespeare becomes merely an option for the English teachers of tomorrow, offerings in such areas as critical theory, “body studies,” and popular culture are proliferating. The report concludes with a description of what concerned administrators, trustees, alumni, parents, and students can do to provoke change. The release of the report coincided with a a six-month celebration of Shakespeare in the nation’s capital. It updates and complements ACTA’s 1996 report The Shakespeare File.
WASHINGTON, DC—In response to the student-led and faculty-supported removal of William Shakespeare’s portrait […]
Wherefore art thou Shakespeare? As we celebrate the 400th anniversary of the Bard's death we examine ACTA's report, The Unkindest Cut: Shakespeare in Exile 2015. This report revealed that one of the most influential writers in the English language is no longer revered in the halls of America's colleges and universities.
At the University of Dallas (UD)—a What Will They Learn?™ “A” school and my undergraduate alma mater—the most significant part of the core curriculum is the Literary Tradition sequence. Undergraduates take four literature classes, beginning with Homer’s Iliad in their first semester and ending with Faulkner’s Go Down, Moses in the fourth. Having had this […]
They’re calling it “the unkindest cut of all.” As Shakespeare fans prepare to celebrate the Bard’s 443rd birthday Monday, researchers for a non-profit group say fewer colleges appear to require students to study the influential author. Just 15 of 70 institutions studied require English majors to take a course on Shakespeare, says a report by […]
A U.S. academic group is bemoaning the many universities abandoning studies of William Shakespeare in favor of such things as “Baywatch.” Timed to coincide with the English writer’s birthday in 1564, the non-profit American Council of Trustees and Alumni issued a report Monday, “The Vanishing Shakespeare,” which found only 15 of the 70 colleges and […]
Fewer of America’s top colleges and universities across the country require English majors to study William Shakespeare, according to a new study released this month by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni. The study, called the Vanishing Shakespeare—released in honor of Shakespeare’s birthday, April 23—surveyed the top 25 national universities and liberal arts colleges […]
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