By Seul Lee, Student Reporter To sidestep is to avoid or evade a problem. Cognitive skills including critical thinking and problem solving skills were reviewed as part of the framework of the 21st Century Skills by the BIE (Buck Institute for Education). Also, many researches and books are about the art of complex problem solving. While “complex problem solving” is in style, the College of Policy Sciences, which was newly founded in 2009, is where you want to go if you wish to become a performer of sidestepping, to make molehills, or even no hills, out of mountains of problems that exist on every level of human life. The special PPEL course, which offers advanced studies of Philosophy, Politics, Economics and Law, is designed to provide students with new, creative and complex methods to approach both academic studies and the real world. Studying Philosophy, students will develop the ability to reason and criticize logically. With Politics, they will gain a profound comprehension on the impact of politics, how to examine and evaluate, and even develop it for the better. By learning about Economics, students will understand the overall workings of the economy, and become capable of applying it to economic conducts in real life. Studying Law, they will form an appreciation of how these systems of rules shape every part of the world we live in. When students have completed this integrated course of studies, they are bound to become intellectuals with incorporated knowledge, which will entitle them to complex problemsolving skills. Students will graduate with the ability to identify complex problems, research and analyze related information, and bring alternative answers and solutions to the table. We can all hope that one day this College, which shows great prospects, will truly become the College to perform sidestepping for not only Korean society but international society.
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