The MLA and the Crisis of the Humanities

Past MLA President Michael Berube’s speech to the Council of Graduate Schools, a version of which was published this week at the Chronicle of Higher Education, offers a sober account of the terrible condition of the humanities circa 2013.  Professor Berube mentions the job market, which “has been in a state of more or less […]

Read More

Should Political Science Be Defunded?

A debate has raged for nearly a year over federal government’s funding of political science research. On one side are those who argue that very little public benefit is derived from such funding and that it only furthers Ivory Tower navel-gazing. On the other side are, not surprisingly, the political scientists themselves and those who […]

Read More

Sean Wilentz Looks at Oliver Stone’s ‘America’

In November, I reviewed the new, supposedly “untold” story of 20th century U.S. history penned by Oliver Stone and American University professor Peter Kuznick. (Parents of American University students can spend their tuition dollars having their children enroll in Kuznick’s course, “Oliver Stone’s America.”) In the review, I mentioned that Princeton professor Sean Wilentz had […]

Read More

The Damage That Accreditors Do

If I were asked to name the ten organizations most adversely impacting Americans – I would undoubtedly think of a few terrorist groups like al-Qaeda or criminal elements like Russian or Italian Mafia crime families, but also on my list, right below the quasi-corrupt NCAA that exploits young athletes to profit and entertain adults, might […]

Read More

Let’s Require Courses in Western Civilization

From the National Association of Scholars’ 100 Great Ideas for Higher Education  *** Every American should know Western civilization, of which American culture and political institutions are an integral part. By Western civilization I mean the constellation of ideas, political arrangements, ethical precepts, and ways of organizing society and the economy that are traceable to […]

Read More

Why Business Schools Are Being More Careful

Business schools and their students are confronting an unpleasant truth that law schools and their students had to learn some time ago: their degrees are not the tickets to automatic success they once seemed to be. Unlike law schools, however, business schools are actually dealing with the problem. A recent WSJ piece reports that starting salaries for recent MBA grads […]

Read More

The Core Value of Higher Education Is Money?

For many economists, the big point about the current higher education bubble is that it deserves to burst.  College education is overpriced because colleges have been getting away with charging students for amenities that have little or nothing to do with real education.  The list of amenities is long, with a lot of disagreement on […]

Read More

The Campus That Says Having White Skin is Unfair

Superior, Wisconsin is at the far northwest tip of the state and the population is overwhelmingly white. There have never been any racial troubles in the area. Nevertheless, officials at the University of Wisconsin branch campus have become “sponsors” of a group calling itself the “Unfair Campaign.” The campaign is built around the assertion that […]

Read More

Let’s Expand Pell Grants Now

Twenty three billion more. That’s what it would cost taxpayers over the next 10 years to restore the federal Pell Grant to its purchasing power 40 years ago.   The early 1970’s were the heyday of the Pell Grant, the federal program targeted to low-income students.  But now the maximum Pell Grant of $5,500 is […]

Read More

Students Stand Up for Love

A courageous group of students are using Valentine’s Day to protest the hook-up culture. At twenty-five schools, students from the Love and Fidelity Network are holding a week-long campaign called “Words that Still Matter.” On Monday they hung 4,400 posters around their campuses, placed ads in their student newspapers, and began inundating social media with […]

Read More

Teaching Collegians to Be World Citizens

Near the beginning of Dickens’ novel Little Dorrit (1857), a character named Monsieur Rigaud explains to a companion, “I am a cosmopolitan gentleman.  I own no particular country. My father was Swiss–Canton de Vaud.  My mother was French by blood, English by birth.  I myself was born in Belgium. I am a citizen of the […]

Read More

A Law to Publicize the Salaries of New Grads?

Heavy pressures for more accountability are descending on colleges.  Senators Ron Wyden and Marco Rubio want states to release data on salaries for recent grads of public colleges, and Eric Cantor pledges the same in the House.  The information, the argument goes,  would help parents and high school seniors make wiser choices, the reasoning goes, […]

Read More

But Will the Campaign for New Accountability Work?

The push to make public the earnings of new college graduates and President Obama’s “College Scorecard,” which he touted in his State of the Union Speech last night, are promising tools to assist graduates in making the best choices of school and major. Several states have also set up similar methods of evaluating the “bang […]

Read More

Obama Bests Rubio on Higher-Ed Reform

In his response to the President’s State of the Union address, Marco Rubio once again displayed his worrisome approach to higher ed policy. Though he rightfully lamented both tuition cost growth and the government’s bias against non-traditional institutions, his proposals did not address the heart of the matter. He suggested expanding federal student aid for students […]

Read More

Moody’s and the Crisis of the Universities

From the New Criterion Last month we noted some of the trends affecting the future of higher education in this country. One trend is the explosion in tuition and fees over the last several decades, an explosion matched by the hypertrophy of college administrators, as more and more “deans of diversity” and programs in non-subjects […]

Read More

Check Out ‘Open Culture’

Here’s a plug for a site I belatedly discovered the other day: Open Culture offers free access to 650 academic courses, movies (from Charade to Charlie Chaplain), language lessons, self-help advice,  books (from textbooks to the Harvard Classics), audiobooks, a list of grants available to women, and much more cultural and educational  material “scattered across […]

Read More

A College Behaves Badly Over Israel

The Brooklyn College pro-BDS event–with which the school’s Political Science Department formally voted to affiliate itself–has come and gone. The big news from the gathering last Thursday came not in anything the two pro-BDS speakers said (their anti-Israel ramblings were entirely predictable) but in reports from Tablet and the Daily News that four anti-BDS students […]

Read More

The Paternos’ Unconvincing Response

After the indictment of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, Penn State did something quite rare for an institution of higher learning facing scandal–it hired a respected outside investigator (former FBI director Louis Freeh) and gave him total access to the relevant university records, including e-mails between key administrators. The resulting Freeh Report used senior […]

Read More

What Do Professors Really Think?

From the blog The Quick & the Ed  The Undergraduate Teaching Faculty The 2010-2011 HERI Faculty Survey , a survey of faculty at four-year universities by the Higher Education Research Institute (HERI) at UCLA, contains some interesting findings. Almost a quarter of professors at four-year universities do not consider teaching their “principal activity” (pg 19) The […]

Read More

The Tribes That Hire the PhDs

Clues to the structure of academia and its ideological leanings sometimes turn up in policy journals. Here’s one: In the Georgetown Public Policy Review, Robert L. Oprisko, a visiting professor at Butler University, notes that “eleven schools contribute 50 percent of the political science academics to research-intensive universities in the United States. Over 100 political […]

Read More
1 134 135 136 137 138 229