My college featured in the Straits Times
The Straits Times (Singapore)
April 30, 2008 Wednesday
Cheers to a liberal arts education
BYLINE: Sandra Davie, Senior Writer
LENGTH: 1009 words
WITH her A-level results, Raffles Junior College student Nazish Zafar could have easily attended any big-name American university.
But she surprised friends and family by choosing Carleton College in Minnesota.
The liberal arts college is consistently ranked among the top five in the United States, but is not a familiar name here.
‘Why is it called a college, not a university?’ some asked her.
But Ms Zafar, 24, who graduated last year with a Bachelor of Arts majoring in sociology and anthropology, is glad she stuck with her choice.
A generous four-year scholarship from Carleton was a reason she went there, but she was also sold on the broad-based curriculum and intimate learning environment promised by the college.
And Carleton did not disappoint.
Her courses ranged from Russian language, culture and society to Middle Eastern social theory, and women and the Islamic construction of gender. She did courses in computer science, qualitative thinking, statistics, and video production and editing.
It all added up to a grounding in varied disciplines and taught her to see issues from various perspectives.
Her invigorating undergraduate experience is what liberal arts colleges are known for, and Singapore will be offering the same brand of education through a liberal arts college of its own.
She says she liked the fact that her courses traversed two or three discipline areas, showing students the connections across different areas of knowledge.
For example, National Identity In Israeli And Palestinian Literature - a course she did in her first year - meant reading novels and poetry, watching documentaries, and analysing articles expressing views from both sides of the conflict.
‘It gave me a refreshingly nuanced, multi-dimensional understanding to the region,’ she recalls.
In Year 2, she visited Moscow for three months, living with a Russian family. Her Russian language skills improved by leaps and bounds.
She added two months to that trip to be a volunteer at a community of foster families caring for orphans.
In her final year last year, she and a college mate won a $10US,000 ($13S,600) grant to launch a health education project in Fortaleza, Brazil.
Their Napkin Project aimed to educate women on the benefits of breastfeeding through messages printed on napkins handed out by street vendors.
Ms Zafar, who hopes to work in the social-humanitarian field, says the six-month stint gave her valuable on-the-ground experience.

