The College of
LIBERAL ARTS

Image
smiling person wearing a black shirt standing in front of building

Student Spotlight

The whole student approach: Weaving culture and wellness into higher education

Keenyn Irene Kehaulani Santiago blends Native Hawaiian health, recreation, and student affairs to develop culturally sound approaches to wellness in higher education

Growing up in the small rural town of Kahuku, Oahu, Keenyn Irene Kehaulani Santiago learned community, determination, and the value of service. Those lessons from her early years on Oahu continue to shape her journey as she finishes her master’s at the School of Language, Culture, and Society’s College Student Services Administration program.

Read More >

Image
cla launchpad scholars

The Launchpad Scholars Program invites all First Gen, first-term, first-year Liberal Arts students to a training session for writing successful scholarship applications.

Learn More

Image
a collage of book covers

Faculty Excellence

College of Liberal Arts year-end reading list 2025

The College of Liberal Arts consists of voracious readers of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and more. While there are always too many worthy books to note, these were ones faculty and staff found particularly interesting and impactful. Here are just some of the books they couldn’t put down in 2025!

Read More

CLA BY THE NUMBERS


5,026

The right size for your education
The College of Liberal Arts is the proud academic home of 5,026 students. With 1 faculty member for every 15 undergraduate students, you'll receive a personalized education paired with a robust liberal arts college experience.


World Class Instruction
Our dynamic, intellectual community of 336 expert faculty tackle the world’s biggest issues from social justice to food insecurity. They conduct symphonies and design in virtual reality. They study the past to forge solutions for the future.

336


4

4-Year Graduation Guarantee
CLA is the only college at Oregon State that guarantees you'll graduate in 4 years. Our graduates go on to successful careers in medicine, technology, the arts, media, law, policy, education, business and more. Your path is wide open.

Research Highlights

How artificial intelligence is shaping innovation in manufacturing and advanced materials sector

Assistant Professor John P. Nelson in the School of Public Policy explores the possibilities of how AI can help and hurt technological progress

Improvements in artificial intelligence (AI) have driven increasing attention to AI’s implications for scientific research and technological development. It’s presumed that AI will help to accelerate scientific advancement, leading to economic growth and the development of solutions to global problems. But how plausible are these expectations for AI?

A new study by Nelson sheds light on the real-world impact of AI and machine learning on technological progress in manufacturing and materials science.

Read More

Image
a materials manufacturing line
Image
a black and white image of two men looking at a painting

Faculty Focus

The legacy of Gordon Gilkey

Gilkey, the College of Liberal Arts’ first dean, headed the German Wartime Art Project during WWII, where he tracked down and gathered over eight thousand pieces of German art produced under Adolf Hitler’s rule

Born and raised in Lane County, Oregon, Gilkey graduated from the University of Oregon in 1936 with a Master of Fine Arts. After World War II, Gilkey returned to Oregon where his service to the arts continued as chairman of OSU's art department and dean of CLA. He had tremendous impact on OSU, local and national art scenes, and museums across the U.S.

READ MORE


CLA Events

 

View all CLA events

donation innovation

Visionary Donations Funding our Future: PRAx

“The Patricia Valian Reser Center for the Creative Arts will serve as a unique and dynamic education and performance center and will be a showcase destination for the visual, musical, theater and cultural arts for students, faculty, campus visitors and Oregonians,” said Larry Rodgers, dean of OSU’s College of Liberal Arts.

A lead gift of $25 million for the complex has been provided by Patricia Reser. Additional gifts include a $2 million commitment from the family of the late Lynne Detrick of West Linn to build a new 500-seat concert hall to offer a high-caliber venue for both listeners and performers, Rodgers said. The OSU Foundation continues to seek philanthropic support for the center, and OSU will also seek state bonding from the 2020 Oregon Legislature to help support the project.

Explore PRAx
Image
PRAx building exterior