Victor E. Tiger
Fort Hays State University
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies
Master of Liberal Studies
The Master of Liberal Studies (MLS) Program consists of four major parts:
a four-course, ten-hour core, an 18-hour concentration (see the paragraph below),
comprehensive exams, and a culminating experience. All four core MLS
courses have as their basic concern “the human being as knower.” IDS
801 (Introduction to Graduate Liberal Studies) introduces students to the MLS
program requirements, introduces students to each of the four core MLS courses,
aims to develop the practice of critical thinking, provides a consideration
of the nature of studying liberally (how and why humans study), and provides
a consideration of possible intrinsic and extrinsic benefits of liberal studies. The
major foci of IDS 802 (Ways of Knowing in Comparative Perspective) are: how
to know, whether knowledge is relative, and what knowledge is for. IDS
802 builds analytical skills, critical thinking skills, and moral reasoning
skills by introducing students to a variety of epistemologies (in the ‘hard’ sciences,
social sciences, and the arts and humanities), by offering an explanation and
critique of the scientific method, and by introducing students to questions
regarding knowledge and its purposes. IDS 803 (Origins and Implications
of the Information Society) helps the student understand the context in which ‘humans
as knowers’ live. IDS 804 (Information Literacy) helps ‘students
as knowers’ acquire techniques and skills for getting and using knowledge.
The MLS Program offers
over two dozen concentrations. About a dozen of these are considered to be available
through distance education. MLS concentrations available
through distance education are labeled “Online” on the MLS Web
site.
For more information about the MLS program, contact:
Director, MLS Program
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, Davis Hall 206d
Fort Hays State University
Hays, KS 67601
785-628-5578
(FAX) 785-628-4203
Email: mls@fhsu.edu