While Glaeser acknowledged the increasing importance of online education in the current system, he maintained that “there is nothing that…can get rid of the tremendous power of meeting face-to-face.”
BIG DATA: SURPRISING SOLUTIONS TO BIG QUESTIONS
Introducing a symposium on big data, University professor and prominent political scientist Gary King argued that teaching engineering and applied sciences as part of a liberal arts education provides students with an important understanding of the social, legal, and moral issues that arise from innovation.
“Whenever engineers can do something, they will do it,” King said. “That’s why we need the liberal arts people, sociologists, and politicians beside us to help change the rules of society.”
King along with fellow panelists—physics professor Efthimios Kaxiras, astronomy professor Alyssa A. Goodman, and government professor Stephen D. Ansolabehere—presented big data projects that Harvard affiliates have spearheaded. The projects presented included one that used new analytical methods to estimate that 13 percent of social media posts, usually on the topic of collective action, are censored by the government in China. The project drew rousing applause from the audience of more than 100 attendees.
Kaxiras, founding director of the Institute for Applied Computational Science, said that a new Master’s degree program in Computational Science and Engineering could facilitate further applications of computation, such as in diagnosing and predicting heart disease. Goodman promoted the Harvard-developed Glue, a new Python package for interactive real-time visualization of multidimensional data, which will work with NASA’s James Webb telescope, the successor of the Hubble telescope.
Speaking to alumnae during the subsequent question-and-answer session, King said that big data analytics could even be applied to conserve and share the Harvard experiences of the audience.
“You have information within you that exists but evaporates when you graduate,” King said. “If we were to capture your experience with big data and feed it to the next Harvard student, that student has a more understood future.”
THE CREATIVE SPARK: THE ROLE OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES IN SOCIETY
A symposium moderated by Diana Sorensen, divisional dean of the arts and humanities, stressed the importance of the arts and humanities in modern society and the role of liberal arts in higher education.
Before the panel, Andrew L. Farkas ’82, a member of the steering committee for the FAS campaign, told the audience that he was working closely with Faculty of Arts and Sciences Dean Michael D. Smith to develop funding specifically for the arts and humanities.
Farkas also described the transformation in his own relationship with the arts and humanities, from entering Harvard as a “self-professed Philistine” to his current fundraising efforts for the liberal arts. He said that the arts and humanities are a core part of the University.
“The development of a true liberal arts education builds what they’ve always called a ‘Renaissance man’,” he said. “Harvard has always excelled in this area, and I believe is now committed more than ever to seeing its own renaissance in the humanities.”
The panel included presentations from Humanities Center Director Homi K. Bhabha, Emma Dench, a professor of classics and history, Stephen J. Greenblatt, a professor of English, and Karen L. Thornber, a professor of comparative literature.
In her introduction, Sorensen described both the practical and aesthetic value of learning the arts and humanities.
“We are convinced that, in the classroom, we give our students the tools for conversation in the civic sphere, and also for the extraordinary pleasures of working with artistic materials, be it the verbal arts, music, film, or theater,” she said.
—Staff writer Francesca Annicchiarico can be reached at fannicchiarico01@college.harvard.edu. Follow her at @FRAnnichiarico.
—Staff writer John P. Finnegan can be reached at johnfinnegan@college.harvard.edu.
—Staff writer Amna H. Hashmi can be reached at amnahashmi@college.harvard.edu. Follow her on Twitter @amna_hashmi.
—Staff writer Brianna D. MacGregor can be reached at bmacgregor@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @bdmacgregor.