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"The Choice is Clear" - C.W. Post Campus
C.W. Post Campus College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

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Message From the Dean

The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is C.W. Post's oldest, largest, and most diverse academic unit. It remains the center of intellectual life on campus -- indeed, the heart and soul of Post -- and continues to afford its students what they need most for success in the world of work and satisfaction in their personal lives.

The College's chief resource is its full-time faculty. Numbering well over a hundred, they include many highly accomplished scholars, researchers, and artists. What most unites these humanists, social scientists, mathematicians, and scientists is a dedication to excellence in teaching. Liberal arts and sciences students rarely, if ever, attend large classroom lectures and regularly receive a great deal of personal attention.

Through its thirteen departments, the College offers over forty majors programs, at least as many minors and concentrations, nearly twenty master's programs, accelerated bachelor's/master's programs, and a doctoral program in clinical psychology. There are such traditional majors as English, history, sociology, and chemistry, as well as distinctive programs in international studies, environmental studies, molecular biology, and applied mathematics. We have a fine pre-medical and pre-law advisory system, and the program in interdisciplinary studies enables graduate students to develop a purposefully idiosyncratic course of study.

There is, of course, a practical side to liberal learning at Post. We realize it matters to students that a degree in chemistry usually leads to a first job closely linked to the major; that a dual major in biology and English can open the way to a job in scientific writing or editing; or that the right combination for a job in government or banking may be a dual major in economics and history with a minor in Spanish.

The emphasis at the College is on cultivating the skills and habits of mind that are essential for shaping a career. Most employers favor broadly educated individuals who can write well, think clearly, and keep learning while on the job. Typically, the former arts and sciences student is the one who will figure out a way to change a task or job that needs to be reinvented.

The best evidence of the value of an arts and sciences degree is the accomplishments of our alumni -- thousands of whom have gone on to positions of responsibility in business, industry, finance, public service, education, the arts, and the professions.

- Katherine Hill-Miller, Dean, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences

Long Island University C.W. Post Campus College of Liberal Arts and Sciences