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Anonymous wrote:In MD, the other state universities other than UMCP aren't great so a LAC it is.
Which LACs? Washington college, Goucher, where are the LACs in MD? In VA?
Loyola
Loyola is not a liberal arts college.
Yes, it is a LAC.
https://www.loyola.edu/about/
The benefits of Loyola’s Jesuit, liberal arts experience lead to a life-long approach of learning and questioning and critical analysis that prepare our alumni for—and set them apart in—the workforce and the world.
I hope this is a bored teen and not a
parent, otherwise you are a bit out of your depth. Just because a school offers a liberal arts curriculum does not mean it is a LAC. Many traditional universities offer a liberal arts curriculum or have colleges within the university that do so. Brown is a notable example. Loyola is in fact a university comprised of 3 or 4 schools IIRC. Please step your game up.
Loyola has only been a university since around 2009. All students take the liberal arts core. The addition of the other schools doesn't change that part of it. Maybe it is now classified as a university but what makes a liberal arts education is still there. I wouldn't consider the school to even be a university since it's the same size as it was before that designation. They've added a bit more to the grad programs (mostly education programs) but it's still focused on undergrads (appr. 4,000 of them). I think it became a university and changed from Loyola College to Loyola University Maryland mostly as a way to distinguish itself from the other Loyolas.
Well, guess what? It doesn’t matter what you “consider it”. It is not a liberal arts college, it does not describe itself as one, and it is not classified as one by the Carnegie classification system. It is in no way shape or form a liberal arts college and you are absolutely clueless and have zero idea what you’re talking about and are embarrassing yourself.