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The College of St. Joseph the Worker is a new Catholic college in Ohio that offers a six-year degree in which students earn both a BA in religious studies and complete an apprenticeship in a skilled trade.
Some quotes from their site:
https://www.collegeofstjoseph.com/
What do you think?
When I talk to older people about their regrets about how they spent their education years, I have heard many express that they wish there were something like this: A college-like experience where you get to debate timeless questions about the meaning of life and man's place in the world with intelligent peers, but one that also sets you up for a fulfilling and stable career.
And my impression of the zoomer generation, with their famous fracture between "progressives" and "trads," is that there is a substantial minority of them who will find this model very attractive. In other words, I think that this college will do well on pure marketing grounds. I hope that it makes good on its promises to its students.
What was your educational experience like? Did you go to college? What do you think about the idea that many people who are currently going to college would do better for themselves by going into a skilled trade?
How do you feel about the gendered flavor of the College of St. Joseph? (Yeah, yeah, I know the Pope is Catholic.) It feels like they are leaning hard into a very specific notion of nominally biblical masculinity.
Some quotes from their site:
Every student at the College of St. Joseph the Worker will earn a Catholic Studies degree. This degree explores the Catholic intellectual tradition, which teaches that man is a rational being, but one that needs the aids of grace and revelation to properly understand the full reality of the Holy Trinity and His creation. As grace perfects nature in accordance with the inner dynamism of the rational soul, so theology perfects philosophy and all studies of the humanities by illuminating the true sense and nature of being, allowing finite intellects to understand truths that they could never have discovered by their own power. The College of St. Joseph the Worker assumes the Catholic tradition not as an intellectual crutch but rather as the ladder by which man can scale beyond the natural limits of the human mind to reach more profound, dynamic, and complex truths that truly free the soul. The tradition is not merely propositional content. It is a method of seeking the truth always with the humility of a creature and so in a manner that is always receptive to the gift of revelation. Reason is not aided by faith. Reason is fulfilled in faith. Our curriculum is, therefore, not divided into “natural” and “supernatural” pursuits—standard secular economics here, theology over there. Rather, everywhere, in all of our studies, our reason is healed and perfected by our faith. Courses will cover everything from Scripture, metaphysics, and epistemology to history, economics, and mathematics, always with an eye toward the three unique dimensions of the lay vocation: work, family, and politics.
How does it work?
During year one, freshmen will study in the classroom and in the shop. During this year they will be introduced to all five trades and given the skills necessary to get to work on real projects.
During the next two years, the students will continue their classroom work and will start working as laborers and apprentices with our partner construction company on actual job sites—spending one year concentrating in electrical and plumbing, and another in carpentry, masonry, and HVAC. The students will be paid for this work.
Then comes a second phase of their education: we will arrange for students to become apprentices to master craftsmen all over the United States. Their education will then shift to an online platform.
At the end of their time with the College of St. Joseph the Worker, they will have gained knowledge in several trades, be well on their way to becoming a journeyman, and have gained the benefits of not just a college degree but of the ideas that make life most human.
https://www.collegeofstjoseph.com/
What do you think?
When I talk to older people about their regrets about how they spent their education years, I have heard many express that they wish there were something like this: A college-like experience where you get to debate timeless questions about the meaning of life and man's place in the world with intelligent peers, but one that also sets you up for a fulfilling and stable career.
And my impression of the zoomer generation, with their famous fracture between "progressives" and "trads," is that there is a substantial minority of them who will find this model very attractive. In other words, I think that this college will do well on pure marketing grounds. I hope that it makes good on its promises to its students.
What was your educational experience like? Did you go to college? What do you think about the idea that many people who are currently going to college would do better for themselves by going into a skilled trade?
How do you feel about the gendered flavor of the College of St. Joseph? (Yeah, yeah, I know the Pope is Catholic.) It feels like they are leaning hard into a very specific notion of nominally biblical masculinity.