Sunday, October 5, 2008

Higher Learning? More Like Higher Earning 2: Electric Boogaloo

Where did college go wrong? These former institutions of higher learning are the new high schools, in more ways than one. When did the words “higher learning” themselves change from something with meaning to just another canned phrase used by “them”? In the bloggingheads video, Professor William Deresiewicz of Yale University and Professor Mark Edmundson of Virginia University postulate that part of it comes from the fact that universities no longer focus on the “big questions”, but on producing workers, or leaders, instead of thinkers.

As William Deresiewicz states, college used to be something much different than it is today. For one thing, he says, they were religious institutions; this means that they were much more focused on religious ideals, which generally are about morality, being a good person, and answering such big questions as what the good life and society are. The colleges of today, however, are with few exceptions extremely secularized, and while this is a good thing in many ways, it does beg the question of how and where these questions are being asked.

College truly is becoming the new high school. While this is not touched on explicitly in the video, it can be inferred with a few examples. High school talks about answering big questions, helping students become better people, and so on. Yet most students know that this is rhetoric and ignore it for what it is in favor of moving through the system as quickly as possible to go on in life. Is this sounding familiar? It's what college has become.

No longer is college focused on answering these questions, it simply says it is because the people in charge hope that if they don't point out the six-hundred-pound gorilla in the room, no one will notice it. What it is focused on is money, and lots of it. As the video states, colleges and universities claim to be non-profit, yet they are shifting more and more towards not only making money, but producing workers who make even more money, in the hope that they will give some of that delicious money back to the school.

This is tied into what they also mention in the video: colleges are not interested in creating thinkers, they are interested in creating “leaders”. That word is in quotes because no one, as William and Mark mention, really knows what it means. Certainly it cannot mean someone who leads, because if there were so many leaders, no one would have anything to lead. As stated earlier, it is simply another bumper-sticker phrase that actually means someone who will make money, and who “makes their way up the institutional pole, no matter how greasy it may be.” They are people who entrench themselves in the system and play by the rules, in contrast to a thinker.

A thinker, on the other hand, is easier to define, and isn't obfuscated by professional collegiate lingo. It is someone who is critical of themselves and their surroundings, of where they are, of their school, and of many - if not all - other things. This is the kind of person that colleges used to create. Not any more, though. The colleges want obedient workers. The government wants obedient workers. Society likes obedient workers. Therefore, colleges and universities do not want philosophers and people who can actually tackle the big questions they claim to want to answer themselves. No, they want to make game designers and lawyers and doctors and businessmen and famous musicians. They aim to produce little more beyond obedient workers.

What about Chapman? Is it a culprit in these shifts away from “institution of higher learning” to “obedient worker assembly line”? Let's go down the checklist: Does it claim to want to help students answer the big questions and make them into good people without actually achieving this? Yes. In fact, it has monuments across the campus dedicated to the “four pillars of education” or some such, yet how often do those come up in classes? Not often. Does it want thinkers? I've already heard of various situations where students or even teachers have been caught in the web of bureaucracy when they tried to ask questions or submit ideas on how to make things better. That doesn't look too good for Chapman's case. Does it want leaders? Most certainly. It obviously has a huge focus on the school of law and the school of business, both incredibly worthwhile professions to invest in, as a school. Half the campus seems to be built from donations from graduates of these facilities! It would appear that Chapman is indeed part of the problem.

What does it all mean, then? Are colleges corrupt institutions that no one in their right mind should send their children to? Of course not. Many are still great places to learn about subjects that you could never learn about otherwise. Some still manage to adhere to the old standards, and those that do not are still wonderful for people who want to actually make a decent living; in this day and age a Bachelor's Degree is the new high school diploma when it comes to applying for a job. This makes them a godsend for young adults who want to make it in the world; it is simply responding to the demand of society. This doesn't make it right, though, and doesn't mean it should remain this way. It is foolhardy to say that colleges are still the pristine centers of higher learning they once were, and it is for that reason that something has to change.

2 comments:

Nick Longley said...

Yeah, so this isn't a lot different than the previous version, because I didn't get any feedback...Well, I got one person who said it was good. That was it. I thought Professor Fox was going to comment on it, but nope...so, I already thought it was decent, since, you know, the idea behind the rough draft was to "make it as good as possible", otherwise the comments and criticisms we'd get would be meaningless. No comments, though, so...I fixed a few things up here and there.

Personally I greatly prefer the in-class peer editing.

professorjfox said...

Yes, I also agree that the out-of-class peer review didn’t work, mainly because of some malingerers in the class. So this Monday: in-class peer review.

Very good first two sentences.

Hyperlink to the video.

Good cohesive paragraph 2.

College is high school paragraph is a bit confusing. You say that college doesn’t touch the big questions, but you say college is becoming like high school, which does ask the big questions. Your real point is the third sentence of that paragraph – using the system to get through rather than asking the big questions.

CS on first sentence of fourth paragraph.

Nice creation of terminology with the obedient workers. You might make the transition between “thinker” term and “obedient worker” term a little bit easier, though, if you use both terms in a sentence that clearly designates one term is taking over the spot of the other.

Nice reference to the four pillars: I walk by every day and think about bringing them up in class, but haven’t yet. It’s a very concrete piece of evidence for your argument.

I think the conclusion shifts back out to the general, but it might be better to cut that approach and work on how Chapman might become part of the solution: what steps it might take, whether those steps are encouraged softly or bureaucratically, and what role the students/professors have to play.

Overall, very cogent and forceful.