
I had to google Kenny Garrett, it looks like he's already got a lot of experience with sax... That's kinda funny actually, telling someone who's been an active musician for 40 years, nominated for 11 grammies, how to play his instrument

Well, so far as I can tell the school I'll be going to doesn't pretend to have much of a jazz curriculum. It's one thing to have a weak program, but where you went seems like they were plain dishonest. That's a counterfeit education! You ask for jazz, they say they'll give you jazz, and in the end what you got was not jazz.
But, did you at least walk away with more skill? It may not have been the shortest path, but if you at least got something out of it and are further ahead than before, then you're now free to apply it to what you really want.
By the way I'm still enjoying dabbling in jazz, I found a copy of Nachmanovitch's book and it was an inspiring read! Got a copy of my own on order, along with Werners book and some Bill Evans disks. I love the idea of being able to competently improvise.
RC,
At least they didn't put their name on 'school of rock' 
I haven't seen School of Rock so I can't really compare

All I know is that August Rush was a godawful movie, I would never have even noticed it on the rental shelf but a friend recommended it - last time I trust his tastes!
The liberal arts requirement is bogus, its another way of them telling you that you didin't learn squat in highschool, so were are making you do it all over again. I know some of the private music college are a lot less stringent on the liberal arts requirement, which makes more sense.
In my school it was a nightmare for string and horn players.. they have to go on tour 2-3 times a semester, and they have really busy performance schedule .. and a lot of them fail their general education classes because they just dont have time to study between practicing, rehearsing and working a part time job.
Funny thing about not learning enough in highschool, one piece of wisdom a highschool teacher gave us in our last year is that anyone would be lucky to retain 5% of what they learn in highschool but what we carry the rest of our lives is social skills. That takes some rare honesty!
The way I view liberal arts requirements is knowledge I don't intend on using, trivia. I get curious about things, but I would rather pay $10 for a library card than hundreds for the courses.
That's another thing that concerns me, that these liberal arts classes will eat into time I could otherwise be spending on music! My plan is to see if I can simply not register for any of them. If I can do that, they probably won't give me any sort of diploma, but that's fine. If somewhere down the road I need a diploma I guess I could go back and take 12 random classes, but otherwise I'm only interested in learning music.