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The Aims of a BYU Education
Education is the power to think clearly,
the power to act well in the worlds work,
and the power to appreciate life.
Brigham Young1
The mission of Brigham Young University is to assist
individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life (The
Mission Statement of Brigham Young University [hereafter
Mission Statement]). To this end, BYU seeks to develop students
of faith, intellect, and character who have the skills and the desire
to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives.
These are the common aims of all education at BYU. Both those
who teach in the classroom and those who direct activities outside
the classroom are responsible for contributing to this complete
educational vision.
The statement that follows reaffirms and expands on the
earlier and more general Mission Statement adopted in 1981. As
the quotations under each heading suggest, this document also
draws on the religious and educational teachings of the
universitys founding prophet, Brigham Young. Quotations within
the text come from the scriptures and from the counsel of modern
prophets, whose teachings about BYU lay the foundation of the
universitys mission.
The following four sections discuss the expected outcomes of
the BYU experience. A BYU education should be (1) spiritually
strengthening, (2) intellectually enlarging, and (3) character
building, leading to (4) lifelong learning and service. Because BYU
is a large university with a complex curriculum, the intellectual
aims are presented here in somewhat greater detail than the other
aims. Yet they are deliberately placed within a larger context. The
sequence flows from a conscious intent to envelop BYUs
intellectual aims within a more complete, even eternal,
perspective that begins with spiritual knowledge and ends with
knowledge applied to the practical tasks of living and serving.
Spiritually Strengthening
Brother Maeser, I want you to remember that
you ought not to teach even the alphabet or the multiplication
tables without the Spirit of God.
—Brigham Young2
The founding charge of BYU is to teach every subject with the
Spirit. It is not intended that all of the faculty should be
categorically teaching religion constantly in their classes, but . . .
that every . . . teacher in this institution would keep his subject
matter bathed in the light and color of the restored gospel.3
This ideal arises from the common purpose of all education at
BYUto build testimonies of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.
A shared desire to seek learning, even by study and also by
faith (D&C 88:118) knits BYU into a unique educational
community. The students, faculty, and staff in this community
possess a remarkable diversity of gifts, but they all think of
themselves as brothers and sisters seeking together to master the
academic disciplines while remaining mastered by the higher
claims of discipleship to the Savior.
A spiritually strengthening education warms and enlightens
students by the bright fire of their teachers faith while enlarging
their minds with knowledge. It also makes students responsible
for developing their own testimonies by strenuous effort. Joseph
Smiths words apply equally to faculty and students at BYU: Thy
mind, O man! if thou wilt lead a soul unto salvation, must stretch
as high as the utmost heavens, and search into and contemplate
the darkest abyss, and the broad expanse of eternitythou must
commune with God.4 Students need not ignore difficult and
important questions. Rather, they should frame their questions in
prayerful, faithful ways, leading them to answers that equip them
to give a reason of the hope that is in them (1 Peter 3:15) and to
articulate honestly and thoughtfully their commitments to Christ
and to his Church.
Intellectually Enlarging
Every accomplishment, every polished grace, every useful attainment in
mathematics, music, and in all science and art belong to the Saints, and
they should avail themselves as expeditiously as possible of the wealth of
knowledge the sciences offer to every diligent and persevering scholar.
Brigham Young5
The intellectual range of a BYU education is the result of an
ambitious commitment to pursue truth. Members of the BYU
community rigorously study academic subjects in the light of
divine truth. An eternal perspective shapes not only how students
are taught but what they are taught. In preparing for the
bachelors degree, students should enlarge their intellects by
developing skills, breadth, and depth: (1) skills in the basic tools
of learning, (2) an understanding of the broad areas of human
knowledge, and (3) real competence in at least one area of
concentration. Further graduate studies build on this foundation.
Undergraduate
- Skills.
BYU undergraduates should acquire the basic tools
needed to learn. The essential academic learning skills are the
abilities to think soundly, to communicate effectively, and to
reason proficiently in quantitative terms. To these ends, a BYU
bachelors degree should lead to:
- Sound thinkingreasoning abilities that prepare students to
understand and solve a wide variety of problems, both
theoretical and practical. Such skills include the ability to keep
a proper perspective when comparing the things that matter
most with things of lesser import. They also include the ability
to engage successfully in logical reasoning, critical analysis,
moral discrimination, creative imagination, and independent
thought.
- Effective communicationlanguage abilities that enable students
to listen, speak, read, and write well; to communicate
effectively with a wide range of audiences in ones area of
expertise as well as on general subjects. For many students this
includes communicating in a second language.
- Quantitative reasoningnumerical abilities that equip students
with the capacity to understand and explain the world in
quantitative terms; to interpret numerical data; and to evaluate
arguments that rely on quantitative information and
approaches.
- Breadth.
BYU undergraduates should also understand the
most important developments in human thought as represented
by the broad domains of knowledge. The gospel provides the
chief source of such breadth because it encompasses the most
comprehensive explanation of life and the cosmos, supplying the
perspective from which all other knowledge is best understood
and measured. The Lord has asked his children to become
acquainted with all good books, and with languages, tongues, and
people (D&C 90:15); to understand things both in heaven and in
the earth, and under the earth; things which have been, things
which are, things which must shortly come to pass; things which
are at home, things which are abroad; the wars and the
perplexities of the nations . . . ; and a knowledge also of countries
and of kingdoms (D&C 88:79).
- Because the gospel encourages the pursuit of all truth,
students at BYU should receive a broad university education [that
will help them] understand important ideas in their own cultural
tradition as well as that of others (Mission Statement).
Specifically, BYU undergraduate students should be educated in
the following broad areas of human knowledge:
- Religionthe doctrines, the covenants, the ordinances, the
standard works, and the history of the restored gospel, as well
as an awareness of other religious traditions.
- Historical perspectivethe development of human civilization,
appreciation for the unique contributions of America to
modern civilization, and a general historical perspective,
including perspective on ones own discipline.
- ScienceThe basic concepts of the physical, biological, and
social sciences, and a recognition of the power and limitations
of the scientific methodpreferably through laboratory or
field experience.
- Arts and letterslively appreciation of the artistic, literary, and
intellectual achievements of human culturesincluding
Western culture and, ideally, non-Western as well.
- Global awarenessinformed awareness of the peoples, cultures,
languages, and nations of the world.
- Depth.
BYU undergraduates should develop competence in
at least one area of concentration. Competence generally demands
study in depth. Such in-depth study helps prepare students for
their lifes work; it also teaches them that genuine understanding
of any subject requires exploring it fully. Students normally
acquire such depth from their major and minor fields. BYUs
religion requirement also asks all students to develop depth in
scriptural studies and religion.
- Depth does not result merely from taking many courses in a
field. Indeed, excessive course coverage requirements may
discourage rather than enhance depth. Depth comes when
students realize the effect of rigorous, coherent, and
progressively more sophisticated study. Depth helps students
distinguish between what is fundamental and what is only
peripheral; it requires focus, provides intense concentration, and
encourages a lean and taut degree that has a meaningful core
and a purposefully designed structure (Memorandum to the
Faculty No. 13). In addition to describing carefully structured
academic majors, this description applies to well-designed BYU
courses of all kinds.
- The chief result of depth is competence. BYUs students
should be capable of competing with the best students in their
field (Mission Statement). Even so, undergraduate study should
be targeted at entrance-level, not expert-level, abilities. The desire
for depth should not lead to bachelors degrees that try to teach
students everything they will need to know after graduation.
Students should be able to complete their degrees within about
four years.
- Undergraduate programs should prepare students to enter the
world of work or to pursue further study. Often this requires
educational activities that help upperclassmen culminate their
studies by integrating them in a capstone project, honors thesis,
senior seminar, or internship. By the time they graduate, students
should grasp their disciplines essential knowledge and skills
(such as mathematical reasoning, statistical analysis, computer
literacy, foreign language fluency, laboratory techniques, library
research, and teaching methods), and many should have
participated in scholarly or creative activities that let them
demonstrate their mastery.
Graduate
Building on the foundation of a strong bachelors degree,
graduate education at BYU asks for even greater competency.
Graduate studies may be either academic or professional and at
either the masters or doctoral level. In all cases, BYU graduate
programs, like undergraduate programs, should be spiritually
strengthening as well as intellectually enlarging.
Graduate programs should help students achieve excellence in
the discipline by engaging its primary sources; mastering its
literature, techniques, and methodologies; and undertaking
advanced systematic studyall at a depth that clearly exceeds the
undergraduate level. In addition, graduate programs should
prepare students to contribute to their disciplines through their
own original insights, designs, applications, expressions, and
discoveries. Graduate study should thereby enable a variety of
contributionssuch as teaching complex knowledge and skills,
conducting original research, producing creative work that applies
advanced learning in the everyday world, and extending
professional service to the discipline and to society.
____________________________________________
These intellectual aims of a BYU education are intended to
give students understanding, perspective, motivation, and
interpersonal abilitiesnot just information and academic skills.
BYU should furnish students with the practical advantage of an
education that integrates academic skills with abstract theories,
real-world applications, and gospel perspectives. Such an
education prepares students who can make a difference in the
world, who can draw on their academic preparation to participate
more effectively in the arenas of daily life. They are parents,
Church leaders, citizens, and compassionate human beings who
are able to improve the moral, social, and ecological environment
in which they and their families live. They are scientists and
engineers who can work effectively in teams and whose work
reflects intellectual and moral integrity; historians who write well
and whose profound understanding of human nature and of
divine influences informs their interpretation of human events;
teachers whose love for their students as children of God is
enriched by global awareness and foreign language skill; artists
whose performances seek to be flawless in both technique and
inspiration; business leaders whose economic judgments and
management styles see financial reward not as an end but as a
means to higher ends. BYU graduates thus draw on an educated
intellect to enhance not only what they know but also what they do
and, ultimately, what they are.
Character Building
A firm, unchangeable course of righteousness through life is what secures
to a person true intelligence.
Brigham Young6
Because it seeks to educate students who are renowned for
what they are as well as for what they know, Brigham Young
University has always cared as much about strong moral
character as about great mental capability. Consequently, a BYU
education should reinforce such moral virtues as integrity,
reverence, modesty, self-control, courage, compassion, and
industry. Beyond this, BYU aims not merely to teach students a
code of ethics but to help them become partakers of the divine
nature. It aspires to develop in its students character traits that
flow from the long-term application of gospel teachings to their
lives. This process begins with understanding humankinds
eternal nature and ends with the blessing of eternal life, when
human character reflects in fully flowered form the attributes of
godliness. Along the way, the fruits of a well-disciplined life are
augmented and fulfilled by the fruits of the spirit of Jesus
Christsuch as charity, a Christlike love for others, which God hath
bestowed upon all who are true followers of his Son, Jesus Christ
(Moroni 7:48). Students thus perfect their quest for character
development by coming unto Christ through faith, repentance,
and righteous living. Then their character begins to resemble his,
not just because they think it should but because that is the way
they are.
President David O. McKay taught that character is the highest
aim of education: above knowledge is wisdom, and above
wisdom is character. True education, he explained, seeks to
make men and women not only good mathematicians, proficient
linguists, profound scientists, or brilliant literary lights, but also
honest men with virtue, temperance, and brotherly love.7
Consequently, a BYU education should bring together the
intellectual integrity of fine academic discipline with the spiritual
integrity of personal righteousness. The result is competence that
reflects the highest professional and academic standardsstrengthened
and ennobled by Christlike attributes.
Thus understood, the development of character is so
important that BYU has no justification for its existence unless it
builds character, creates and develops faith, and makes men and
women of strength and courage, fortitude, and servicemen and
women who will become stalwarts in the Kingdom and bear
witness of the . . . divinity of the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is not
justified on an academic basis only.8 Rather, it fulfills its promise
when the morality of the graduates of this University provide[s]
the music of hope for the inhabitants of this planet.9
Every part of the BYU experience should therefore strengthen
characteracademic integrity in taking a test or writing a research
paper; sportsmanship on the playing field; the honest reporting of
research findings in a laboratory; careful use of university funds
derived from the tithes of Church members; treating all other
people with dignity and fairness; and wholehearted acceptance of
commitments made to bishops and parents. Character is
constructed by small decisions. At this personal level of detail,
BYU will realize its hope of teaching those moral virtues which
characterize the life and teachings of the Son of God (Mission
Statement).
Lifelong Learning and Service
We might ask, when shall we cease to learn? I will give you my opinion
about it; never, never.... We shall never cease to learn, unless we
apostatize from the religion of Jesus Christ.
Brigham Young10
Our education should be such as to improve our minds and fit us for
increased usefulness; to make us of greater service to the human family.
Brigham Young11
Well-developed faith, intellect, and character prepare students
for a lifetime of learning and service. By entering to learn and
continuing to learn as they go forth to serve, BYU students
strengthen not only themselvesthey also bring strength to
others in the tasks of home and family life, social relationships,
civic duty, and service to mankind (Mission Statement).
- Continual Learning.
BYU should inspire students to keep
alive their curiosity and prepare them to continue learning
throughout their lives. BYU should produce careful readers,
prayerful thinkers, and active participants in solving family,
professional, religious, and social problems. They will then be like
Abraham of old, who had been a follower of righteousness,
desiring also to be one who possessed great knowledge, and to be
a greater follower of righteousness, and to possess a greater
knowledge, . . . desiring to receive instructions, and to keep the
commandments of God. In this lifelong quest, they, like
Abraham, will find greater happiness and peace and rest
(Abraham 1:2). Thus a BYU diploma is a beginning, not an end,
pointing the way to a habit of constant learning. In an era of rapid
changes in technology and information, the knowledge and skills
learned this year may require renewal the next. Therefore, a BYU
degree should educate students in how to learn, teach them that
there is much still to learn, and implant in them a love of learning
by study and also by faith (D&C 88:118).
- Service.
Since a decreasing fraction of the Church
membership can be admitted to study at BYU, it is ever more
important that those who are admitted use their talents to build
the kingdom of God on the earth. Hence, BYU should nurture in
its students the desire to use their knowledge and skills not only
to enrich their own lives but also to bless their families, their
communities, the Church, and the larger society. Students should
learn, then demonstrate, that their ultimate allegiance is to higher
values, principles, and human commitments rather than to mere
self-interest. By doing this, BYU graduates can counter the
destructive and often materialistic self-centeredness and
worldliness that afflict modern society. A service ethic should
permeate every part of BYUs activitiesfrom the admissions
process through the curriculum and extracurricular experiences to
the moment of graduation. This ethic should also permeate each
students heart, leading him or her to the ultimate wellspring of
charitythe love for others that Christ bestows on his followers.
Conclusion
Education is a good thing, and blessed is the man who has it, and can
use it for the dissemination of the Gospel without being puffed up with
pride.
Brigham Young12
These are the aims of a BYU education. Taken together, they
should lead students toward wholeness: the balanced
development of the total person (Mission Statement). These aims
aspire to promote an education that helps students integrate all
parts of their university experience into a fundamentally sacred
way of lifetheir faith and reasoning, their knowledge and
conduct, their public lives and private convictions. Ultimately,
complete wholeness comes only through the Atonement of him
who said, I am come that they might have life, and that they
might have it more abundantly (John 10:10). Yet a university
education, guided by eternal principles, can greatly assist
individuals in their quest for that abundant eternal life
(Mission Statement).
A commitment to this kind of education has inspired the
prophets of the past to found Church schools, like BYU, on the
principle that to be learned is good if they hearken unto the
counsels of God (2 Nephi 9:29). These prophets have known the
risks of such an enterprise, for that happiness which is prepared
for the saints shall be hid forever from those who are puffed up
because of their learning, and their wisdom (see 2 Nephi
9:4243). Yet they have also known that education plays a vital
role in realizing the promises of the Restoration; that a broad
vision of education for self-reliance and personal growth is at the
very heart of the gospel when the gospel is at the heart of
education. To the degree that BYU achieves its aims, the lives of
its students will confirm Brigham Youngs confidence that
education is indeed a good thing, blessing all those who
humbly and faithfully use it to bless others.
Notes
- Brigham Young, quoted by George H. Brimhall in The
Brigham Young University, Improvement Era, vol. 23, no. 9 (July
1920), p. 831.
- Brigham Young, in Reinhard Maeser, Karl G. Maeser: A
Biography (Provo: Brigham Young University, 1928), p. 79.
- Spencer W. Kimball, Education for Eternity, Preschool
Address to BYU Faculty and Staff, 12 September 1967, p. 11.
- Joseph Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, sel. Joseph
Fielding Smith (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Company, 1972),
p. 137.
- Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses (hereafter JD), vol. 10
(London: Latter-day Saints Book Depot, 185486), p. 224.
- Brigham Young, JD 8:32.
- David O. McKay, Why Education? Improvement Era,
vol. 70, no. 9 (September 1967), p. 3.
- Spencer W. Kimball, On My Honor, in Speeches of the Year,
1978 (Provo: Brigham Young University Press, 1979), p. 137.
- Spencer W. Kimball, Second Century Address and
Dedication of Carillon Tower and Bells, Brigham Young
University, 10 October 1975, p. 12.
- Brigham Young, JD 3:203.
- Brigham Young, JD 14:83.
- Brigham Young, JD 11:214.
Approved by the BYU Board of Trustees on March 1, 1995.
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