I was fortunate in that I attended university in Canada in the early 1970s when you could take a true liberal arts degree with no programmes, majors or minors.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I wanted to go to a liberal arts college, I wanted to have that experience.
I went to a liberal arts college, and as part of my background, I was majoring in mathematics and physics.
When I finished high school, I was 16, and in Argentina you have to choose a career right after high school. There is no such thing as a liberal arts education.
My parents had an old-fashioned ideal of college, that four years at a liberal arts college should be a liberal arts education.
I do regret that when I went to college, I didn't have a liberal arts education. I got a BFA in musical theater, so it was a very directed toward what I was doing. I wish that I had expanded my horizons a little bit.
I wasn't using college as a stepping stone to law school or some other career. I just wanted a liberal-arts education.
I was an English major in college with minors in Fine Arts and Humanities.
I wish I'd gone to a small liberal-arts college where I'd have read the great books instead of a large university where I majored in early-childhood education.
I went to NYU to study liberal arts.
I had a liberal arts education at Amherst College where I had two majors, mathematics and philosophy.