Thursday, September 2, 2010

Public higher ed: "a narrower and more hollow mission"


Public Higher Education Is 'Eroding From All Sides,' Warn Political Scientists (Chronicle of Higher Education)

     The ideal of American public higher education may have entered a death spiral, several scholars said here Thursday during a panel discussion at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. That crisis might ultimately harm not only universities, but also democracy itself, they warned.
     "We've crossed a threshold," said Clyde W. Barrow, director of the Center for Policy Analysis at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth. "Higher education is no longer viewed as a public good in this country. As tuition at public universities becomes more expensive, middle-class parents say, 'I'll bite the bullet and pay this for four years, but I don't want to pay for it a second time with taxes.' And families who are frozen out of the system see public universities as something for the affluent. They'd rather see the state spend money on health care."


     The mid-20th century suddenly appears to have been a golden age for higher education, said Wendy Brown, a professor of political science at the University of California at Berkeley.
     "That era offered not only literacy but liberal arts to a mass public," Ms. Brown said. "But today that idea is eroding from all sides. Cultural values don't support the liberal arts. Debt-burdened families aren't demanding it. The capitalist state isn't interested in it. Universities aren't funding it."
     The danger, Ms. Brown said, is that the public will give up on the idea of educating people for democratic citizenship. Instead, all of public higher education will be essentially vocational in nature, oriented entirely around the market logic of job preparation. Instead of educating whole persons, Ms. Brown warned, universities will be expected to "build human capital," a narrower and more hollow mission.
     And faculty members are unlikely to resist those changes at a time when two-thirds of them are on contingent appointments instead of the more secure tenure track, said Cary Nelson, president of the American Association of University Professors. They simply do not have enough power within the institution.
     During a plenary lecture earlier Thursday, Mr. Nelson, who is also a professor of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said he believes that the era of "incremental state funding for public higher education is basically over." For the foreseeable future, he said, the traditional battles for higher state appropriations are bound to be losing ones….

Photos: tonight, Huntington Beach

Manifestering corruption

Streaming Video of the August 30 meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees is now available at the district website (here). Scroll down to “archived videos”; click on “video” for August 30.

Then “jump to” item 6.3—“institutional memberships.”

Then: Enjoy the clash between social conservative/libertarian Don Wagner and the IVC (and Saddleback) faculty, who have the temerity to seek to maintain their membership in the Academic Senates for California Community Colleges, which, um, leaves headless bodies out in the Arizona desert. Or something.

Have you enjoyed our recent submersion in the MANIFESTERING corruption that is OC government? It’s fun—isn’t it?—connecting the dots between John and T-Rack and Mike and Chriss and Michael and Tom and John again and Phil and Raghu and Peggy and Susan and Tonya Harding.

As I was leaving campus today, I saw a kid walking and phone-talking whilst wearing his pants just below cheeks, revealing much square yardage of blue underwear. I quickly readied my camera, but, alas, he hiked up his pants several inches before I could take a shot. Here’s what I got.

Behold the future.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...