The Corner

Education

The Sad Decline of UNC-Asheville

Like many colleges and universities across the U.S., the University of North Carolina-Asheville (UNCA) has had falling enrollment — down 25 percent in the last five years. Inevitably, budget cuts have to be made.

The trouble is that UNCA’s purpose was to serve as a liberal-arts institution, and the cuts downgrade that mission. In today’s Martin Center article, Jenna Robinson looks at the situation and suggests that it’s time to start over.

She writes:

UNCA now touts “relationship-driven education” and “small class sizes, close collaboration, and high-impact experiences” as selling points. But these aren’t enough to make up for a curriculum that is almost indistinguishable from that of most other UNC schools. To be sure, the school still calls its humanities program “a hallmark of UNC Asheville.” But a school that eliminates philosophy and classics isn’t taking humanities seriously. (In fact, the words “liberal-arts curriculum” were also victims of the 2022 mission-statement revision.)

Robinson would like to see UNCA strive to rebuild itself as the UNC school that focuses on and excels at giving students a good education in the liberal arts.

George Leef is the the director of editorial content at the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal. He is the author of The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A Political Fable for Our Time.
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