William, William, wherefore art thou, William?
Well, he's not in about half the colleges and universities in North Carolina.
A new report from the John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy found that nearly 50 percent of North Carolina colleges and universities no longer require their English majors to take a course in the work of William Shakespeare.
Within the UNC system, seven campuses do not require English majors to study Shakespeare. UNC-Chapel Hill maintains the requirement, while N.C. State does not.
Of 34 private institutions surveyed in the state, 17 require English majors to take a course in Shakespeare; 17 do not.
The Pope Center says its report, “To Be or Not to Be: Shakespeare in the English Department,” is based on information from the Web sites of 49 four-year universities in North Carolina. When clarification was needed, university personnel were contacted.
The full report is available here.


Re: This is typical
I don't think the Pope Center's report was criticizing the schools that do support Shakespeare considering Davidson puts so much emphasis on sustaining the arts.
I believe the report instead was merely to point out and maybe encourage schools to be more like Davidson and continue a strong focus on the arts. I will agree with previous posters though and say that the Pope Center probably needs to do a little more research into the actual course offerings than JUST off of the school's website before releasing reports such as this.