<p>are the division of undergraduate studies and liberal arts different?</p>
<p>If they are different, can you tell me what's exactly different between the division of </p>
<p>undergraduate studies and liberal arts?</p>
<p>Thanks~</p>
<p>are the division of undergraduate studies and liberal arts different?</p>
<p>If they are different, can you tell me what's exactly different between the division of </p>
<p>undergraduate studies and liberal arts?</p>
<p>Thanks~</p>
<p>You need to be a bit more specific. What schools are you referring to?</p>
<p>If you are asking whether the BA or BA degree from a university, where you are an undergraduate (and the school also offers graduate programs) is the same as getting that degree from a Liberal Arts college (LAC), the answer is that there is no difference. It is the same degree.</p>
<p>Universities and LACs have different kinds of learning environments, with associated pros and cons, and some universities are very LAC-like, but they both offer the same degrees and those degrees are treated the same way by graduate schools and the job market.</p>
<p>I think the OP is asking a different question. Undergraduate studies is a broader term than liberal arts, and can include, for example, engineering, education, nursing, business etc. </p>
<p>Liberal Arts usually refers to arts and sciences–which includes humanities (e.g., English, history, philosophy, etc.), social sciences (economics, political science, psychology, sociology, etc.) and the “hard” or natural sciences (chemistry, physics, biology, etc.). You can study liberal arts at, naturally, a liberal arts college or at a university. At the latter, the liberal arts are usually in a college (or school) of arts and sciences. </p>
<p>I hope that answered your question.</p>