Blogger: This essay and the author’s response below to criticisms of it
is important. However, it still leaves unanswered, on my own reading, what real
education is and should be.
I
IIn the spring of 2008, I did a daylong stint on the Yale admissions committee. We—that is, three admissions staff, a member of the college dean’s office, and me, the faculty representative—were going through submissions from eastern Pennsylvania. The applicants had been assigned a score from one to four, calculated from a string of figures and codes—SATs, GPA, class rank, numerical scores to which the letters of recommendation had been converted, special notations for legacies and diversity cases. The ones had already been admitted, and the threes and fours could get in only under special conditions—if they were a nationally ranked athlete, for instance, or a “DevA,” (an applicant in the highest category of “development” cases, which means a child of very rich donors). Our task for the day was to adjudicate among the twos. Huge bowls of junk food were stationed at the side of the room to keep our energy up.
IIn the spring of 2008, I did a daylong stint on the Yale admissions committee. We—that is, three admissions staff, a member of the college dean’s office, and me, the faculty representative—were going through submissions from eastern Pennsylvania. The applicants had been assigned a score from one to four, calculated from a string of figures and codes—SATs, GPA, class rank, numerical scores to which the letters of recommendation had been converted, special notations for legacies and diversity cases. The ones had already been admitted, and the threes and fours could get in only under special conditions—if they were a nationally ranked athlete, for instance, or a “DevA,” (an applicant in the highest category of “development” cases, which means a child of very rich donors). Our task for the day was to adjudicate among the twos. Huge bowls of junk food were stationed at the side of the room to keep our energy up.
The junior officer in charge, a young man who looked to be about
30, presented each case, rat-a-tat-tat, in a blizzard of admissions jargon that
I had to pick up on the fly. “Good rig”: the transcript exhibits a good degree
of academic rigor. “Ed level 1”: parents have an educational level no higher
than high school, indicating a genuine hardship case. “MUSD”: a musician in the
highest category of promise. Kids who had five or six items on their list of
extracurriculars—the “brag”—were already in trouble, because that wasn’t nearly
enough. We listened, asked questions, dove into a letter or two, then voted up or down.
With so many accomplished applicants to choose from, we were
looking for kids with something special, “PQs”—personal qualities—that were
often revealed by the letters or essays. Kids who only had the numbers and the résumé were usually rejected: “no spark,” “not a
team-builder,” “this is pretty much in the middle of the fairway for us.” One
young person, who had piled up a truly insane quantity of extracurriculars and
who submitted nine letters of recommendation, was felt to be “too
intense.” On the other hand, the numbers and the résumé were clearly indispensable.
I’d been told that successful applicants could either be “well-rounded” or
“pointy”—outstanding in one particular way—but if they were pointy, they had to
be really pointy: a musician whose audition tape had impressed
the music department, a scientist who had won a national award.
“Super People,” the writer James Atlas has called them—the
stereotypical ultra-high-achieving elite college students of today. A double
major, a sport, a musical instrument, a couple of foreign languages, service work
in distant corners of the globe, a few hobbies thrown in for good measure: They
have mastered them all, and with a serene self-assurance that leaves adults and
peers alike in awe. A friend who teaches at a top university once asked her
class to memorize 30 lines of the eighteenth-century poet Alexander Pope.
Nearly every single kid got every single line correct. It was a thing of
wonder, she said, like watching thoroughbreds circle a track.
These enviable youngsters appear to be the winners in the race we
have made of childhood. But the reality is very different, as I have witnessed
in many of my own students and heard from the hundreds of young people whom I
have spoken with on campuses or who have written to me over the last few years.
Our system of elite education manufactures young people who are smart and talented and driven, yes, but
also anxious, timid, and lost, with little intellectual curiosity and a stunted
sense of purpose: trapped in a bubble of privilege, heading meekly in the same
direction, great at what they’re doing but with no idea why they’re doing it.
When I speak of elite education, I mean prestigious institutions
like Harvard or Stanford or Williams as well as the larger universe of
second-tier selective schools, but I also mean everything that leads up to and
away from them—the private and affluent public high schools; the ever-growing
industry of tutors and consultants and test-prep courses; the admissions
process itself, squatting like a dragon at the entrance to adulthood; the
brand-name graduate schools and employment opportunities that come after the
B.A.; and the parents and communities, largely upper-middle class, who push
their children into the maw of this machine. In short, our entire system of
elite education.
I should say that this subject is very personal for me. Like so
many kids today, I went off to college like a sleepwalker. You chose the most
prestigious place that let you in; up ahead were vaguely understood objectives:
status, wealth—“success.” What it meant to actually get an education and why
you might want one—all this was off the table. It was only after 24 years in
the Ivy League—college and a Ph.D. at Columbia, ten years on the faculty at
Yale—that I started to think about what this system does to kids and how they
can escape from it, what it does to our society and how we can dismantle it.
Ayoung woman from another school wrote me this about her boyfriend
at Yale:
Before he started college, he spent most of his time reading and
writing short stories. Three years later, he’s painfully insecure, worrying
about things my public-educated friends don’t give a second thought to, like
the stigma of eating lunch alone and whether he’s “networking” enough. No one
but me knows he fakes being well-read by thumbing through the first and last
chapters of any book he hears about and obsessively devouring reviews in lieu
of the real thing. He does this not because he’s incurious, but because there’s
a bigger social reward for being able to talk about books than for actually
reading them.
I taught many wonderful young people during my years in the Ivy
League—bright, thoughtful, creative kids whom it was a pleasure to talk with
and learn from. But most of them seemed content to color within the lines that
their education had marked out for them. Very few were passionate about ideas.
Very few saw college as part of a larger project of intellectual discovery and
development. Everyone dressed as if they were ready to be interviewed at a
moment’s notice.
Look beneath the façade of seamless well-adjustment, and what you
often find are toxic levels of fear, anxiety, and depression, of emptiness and
aimlessness and isolation. A large-scale survey of college freshmen recently
found that self-reports of emotional well-being have fallen to their lowest
level in the study’s 25-year history.
So extreme are the admission standards now that kids who manage to
get into elite colleges have, by definition, never experienced anything but
success. The prospect of not being successful terrifies them,
disorients them. The cost of falling short, even temporarily, becomes not
merely practical, but existential. The result is a violent aversion to risk.
You have no margin for error, so you avoid the possibility that you will ever
make an error. Once, a student at Pomona told me that she’d love to have a
chance to think about the things she’s studying, only she doesn’t have the
time. I asked her if she had ever considered not trying to get an A in every
class. She looked at me as if I had made an indecent suggestion.
There are exceptions, kids who insist, against all odds, on trying
to get a real education. But their experience tends to make them feel like
freaks. One student told me that a friend of hers had left Yale because she
found the school “stifling to the parts of yourself that you’d call a soul.”
“Return on investment”: that’s the phrase you often hear today when
people talk about college. What no one seems to ask is what the “return” is
supposed to be. Is it just about earning more money? Is the only purpose of an
education to enable you to get a job? What, in short, is college for?
The first thing that college is for is to teach you to think. That
doesn’t simply mean developing the mental skills particular to individual
disciplines. College is an opportunity to stand outside the world for a few
years, between the orthodoxy of your family and the exigencies of career, and
contemplate things from a distance.
Learning how to think is only the beginning, though. There’s
something in particular you need to think about: building a self. The notion
may sound strange. “We’ve taught them,” David Foster Wallace once said, “that a
self is something you just have.” But it is only through the act of
establishing communication between the mind and the heart, the mind and
experience, that you become an individual, a unique being—a soul. The job of
college is to assist you to begin to do that. Books, ideas, works of art and
thought, the pressure of the minds around you that are looking for their own
answers in their own ways.
College is not the only chance to learn to think, but it is the
best. One thing is certain: If you haven’t started by the time you finish your
B.A., there’s little likelihood you’ll do it later. That is why an
undergraduate experience devoted exclusively to career preparation is four
years largely wasted.
Elite schools like to boast that they teach their students how to
think, but all they mean is that they train them in the analytic and rhetorical
skills that are necessary for success in business and the professions.
Everything is technocratic—the development of expertise—and everything is
ultimately justified in technocratic terms.
Religious colleges—even obscure, regional schools that no one has
ever heard of on the coasts—often do a much better job in that respect. What an
indictment of the Ivy League and its peers: that colleges four levels down on
the academic totem pole, enrolling students whose SAT scores are hundreds of
points lower than theirs, deliver a better education, in the highest sense of
the word.
At least the classes at elite schools are academically rigorous,
demanding on their own terms, no? Not necessarily. In the sciences, usually; in
other disciplines, not so much. There are exceptions, of course, but professors
and students have largely entered into what one observer called a
“nonaggression pact.” Students are regarded by the institution as “customers,”
people to be pandered to instead of challenged. Professors are rewarded for
research, so they want to spend as little time on their classes as they can.
The profession’s whole incentive structure is biased against teaching, and the
more prestigious the school, the stronger the bias is likely to be. The result
is higher marks for shoddier work.
It is true that today’s young people appear to be more socially
engaged than kids have been for several decades and that they are more apt to
harbor creative or entrepreneurial impulses. But it is also true, at least at
the most selective schools, that even if those aspirations make it out of
college—a big “if”—they tend to be played out within the same narrow conception
of what constitutes a valid life: affluence, credentials, prestige.
Experience itself has been reduced to instrumental function, via
the college essay. From learning to commodify your experiences for the
application, the next step has been to seek out experiences in order to have
them to commodify. The New York Times reports that there is
now a thriving sector devoted to producing essay-ready summers, but what
strikes one is the superficiality of the activities involved: a month traveling
around Italy studying the Renaissance, “a whole day” with a band of renegade
artists. A whole day!
I’ve noticed something similar when it comes to service. Why is it
that people feel the need to go to places like Guatemala to do their projects
of rescue or documentation, instead of Milwaukee or Arkansas? When students do
stay in the States, why is it that so many head for New Orleans? Perhaps it’s
no surprise, when kids are trained to think of service as something they are
ultimately doing for themselves—that is, for their résumés. “Do well by doing
good,” goes the slogan. How about just doing good?
If there is one idea, above all, through which the concept of
social responsibility is communicated at the most prestigious schools, it is
“leadership.” “Harvard is for leaders,” goes the Cambridge cliché. To be a
high-achieving student is to constantly be urged to think of yourself as a
future leader of society. But what these institutions mean by leadership is
nothing more than getting to the top. Making partner at a major law firm or
becoming a chief executive, climbing the greasy pole of whatever hierarchy you
decide to attach yourself to. I don’t think it occurs to the people in charge
of elite colleges that the concept of leadership ought to have a higher
meaning, or, really, any meaning.
The irony is that elite students are told that they can be
whatever they want, but most of them end up choosing to be one of a few very
similar things. As of 2010, about a third of graduates went into financing or
consulting at a number of top schools, including Harvard, Princeton, and
Cornell. Whole fields have disappeared from view: the clergy, the military,
electoral politics, even academia itself, for the most part, including basic
science. It’s considered glamorous to drop out of a selective college if you
want to become the next Mark Zuckerberg, but ludicrous to stay in to become a
social worker. “What Wall Street figured out,” as Ezra Klein has put it, “is
that colleges are producing a large number of very smart, completely confused
graduates. Kids who have ample mental horsepower, an incredible work ethic and
no idea what to do next.”
For the most selective colleges, this system is working very well
indeed. Application numbers continue to swell, endowments are robust, tuition
hikes bring ritual complaints but no decline in business. Whether it is working
for anyone else is a different question.
It almost feels ridiculous to have to insist that colleges like
Harvard are bastions of privilege, where the rich send their children to learn
to walk, talk, and think like the rich. Don’t we already know this? They aren’t
called elite colleges for nothing. But apparently we like pretending otherwise.
We live in a meritocracy, after all.
The sign of the system’s alleged fairness is the set of policies
that travel under the banner of “diversity.” And that diversity does indeed
represent nothing less than a social revolution. Princeton, which didn’t even
admit its first woman graduatestudent until 1961—a year in which a
grand total of one (no doubt very lonely) African American matriculated at its
college—is now half female and only about half white. But diversity of sex and
race has become a cover for increasing economic resegregation. Elite colleges
are still living off the moral capital they earned in the 1960s, when they took
the genuinely courageous step of dismantling the mechanisms of the WASP
aristocracy.
The truth is that the meritocracy was never more than partial.
Visit any elite campus across our great nation, and you can thrill to the
heart-warming spectacle of the children of white businesspeople and
professionals studying and playing alongside the children of black, Asian, and
Latino businesspeople and professionals. Kids at schools like Stanford think
that their environment is diverse if one comes from Missouri and another from
Pakistan, or if one plays the cello and the other lacrosse. Never mind that all
of their parents are doctors or bankers.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t a few exceptions, but that is all
they are. In fact, the group that is most disadvantaged by our current
admissions policies are working-class and rural whites, who are hardly present
on selective campuses at all. The only way to think these places are diverse is
if that’s all you’ve ever seen.
Let’s not kid ourselves: The college admissions game is not
primarily about the lower and middle classes seeking to rise, or even about the
upper-middle class attempting to maintain its position. It is about determining
the exact hierarchy of status within the upper-middle class itself. In the
affluent suburbs and well-heeled urban enclaves where this game is principally
played, it is not about whether you go to an elite school. It’s about which one
you go to. It is Penn versus Tufts, not Penn versus Penn State. It doesn’t
matter that a bright young person can go to Ohio State, become a doctor, settle
in Dayton, and make a very good living. Such an outcome is simply too horrible
to contemplate.
This system is exacerbating inequality, retarding social mobility,
perpetuating privilege, and creating an elite that is isolated from the society
that it’s supposed to lead. The numbers are undeniable. In 1985, 46 percent of
incoming freshmen at the 250 most selective colleges came from the top quarter
of the income distribution. By 2000, it was 55 percent. As of 2006, only about
15 percent of students at the most competitive schools came from the bottom
half. The more prestigious the school, the more unequal its student body is apt
to be. And public institutions are not much better than private ones. As of
2004, 40 percent of first-year students at the most selective state campuses
came from families with incomes of more than $100,000, up from 32 percent just
five years earlier.
The major reason for the trend is clear. Not increasing tuition,
though that is a factor, but the ever-growing cost of manufacturing children
who are fit to compete in the college admissions game. The more hurdles there
are, the more expensive it is to catapult your kid across them. Wealthy
families start buying their children’s way into elite colleges almost from the
moment they are born: music lessons, sports equipment, foreign travel
(“enrichment” programs, to use the all-too-perfect term)—most important, of
course, private-school tuition or the costs of living in a place with top-tier
public schools. The SAT is supposed to measure aptitude, but what it actually
measures is parental income, which it tracks quite closely. Today, fewer than
half of high-scoring students from low-income families even enroll at
four-year schools.
The problem isn’t that there aren’t more qualified lower-income
kids from which to choose. Elite private colleges will never allow their
students’ economic profile to mirror that of society as a whole. They can’t
afford to—they need a critical mass of full payers and they need to tend to
their donor base—and it’s not even clear that they’d want to.
And so it is hardly a coincidence that income inequality is higher
than it has been since before the Great Depression, or that social mobility is
lower in the United States than in almost every other developed country. Elite
colleges are not just powerless to reverse the movement toward a more unequal
society; their policies actively promote it.
Is there anything that I can do, a lot of young people have written
to ask me, to avoid becoming an out-of-touch, entitled little shit? I don’t
have a satisfying answer, short of telling them to transfer to a public
university. You cannot cogitate your way to sympathy with people of different
backgrounds, still less to knowledge of them. You need to interact with them
directly, and it has to be on an equal footing: not in the context of
“service,” and not in the spirit of “making an effort,” either—swooping down on
a member of the college support staff and offering to “buy them a coffee,” as a
former Yalie once suggested, in order to “ask them about themselves.”
Instead of service, how about service work? That’ll
really give you insight into other people. How about waiting tables so that you
can see how hard it is, physically and mentally? You really aren’t as smart as
everyone has been telling you; you’re only smarter in a certain way. There are
smart people who do not go to a prestigious college, or to any college—often
precisely for reasons of class. There are smart people who are not “smart.”
I am under no illusion that it doesn’t matter where you go to
college. But there are options. There are still very good public universities
in every region of the country. The education is often impersonal, but the
student body is usually genuinely diverse in terms of socioeconomic background,
with all of the invaluable experiential learning that implies.
U.S. News and World Report supplies the percentage of freshmen at each college who finished
in the highest 10 percent of their high school class. Among the top 20
universities, the number is usually above 90 percent. I’d be wary of attending
schools like that. Students determine the level of classroom discussion; they
shape your values and expectations, for good and ill. It’s partly because of
the students that I’d warn kids away from the Ivies and their ilk. Kids at less
prestigious schools are apt to be more interesting, more curious, more open,
and far less entitled and competitive.
If there is anywhere that college is still college—anywhere that
teaching and the humanities are still accorded pride of place—it is the liberal
arts college. Such places are small, which is not for everyone, and they’re
often fairly isolated, which is also not for everyone. The best option of all
may be the second-tier—not second-rate—colleges, like Reed, Kenyon, Wesleyan,
Sewanee, Mount Holyoke, and others. Instead of trying to compete with Harvard
and Yale, these schools have retained their allegiance to real educational
values.
Not being an entitled little shit is an admirable goal. But in the
end, the deeper issue is the situation that makes it so hard to be anything
else. The time has come, not simply to reform that system top to bottom, but to
plot our exit to another kind of society altogether.
The education system has to act to mitigate the class system, not
reproduce it. Affirmative action should be based on class instead of race, a
change that many have been advocating for years. Preferences for legacies and
athletes ought to be discarded. SAT scores should be weighted to account for
socioeconomic factors. Colleges should put an end to résumé-stuffing by
imposing a limit on the number of extracurriculars that kids can list on their
applications. They ought to place more value on the kind of service jobs that
lower-income students often take in high school and that high achievers almost
never do. They should refuse to be impressed by any opportunity that was
enabled by parental wealth. Of course, they have to stop cooperating with U.S.
News.
More broadly, they need to rethink their conception of merit. If
schools are going to train a better class of leaders than the ones we have
today, they’re going to have to ask themselves what kinds of qualities they
need to promote. Selecting students by GPA or the number of extracurriculars
more often benefits the faithful drudge than the original mind.
The changes must go deeper, though, than reforming the admissions process.
That might address the problem of mediocrity, but it won’t address the greater
one of inequality. The problem is the Ivy League itself. We have contracted the
training of our leadership class to a set of private institutions. However much
they claim to act for the common good, they will always place their interests
first. The arrangement is great for the schools, but is Harvard’s desire for
alumni donations a sufficient reason to perpetuate the class system?
I used to think that we needed to create a world where every child
had an equal chance to get to the Ivy League. I’ve come to see that what we
really need is to create one where you don’t have to go to the Ivy League, or
any private college, to get a first-rate education.
High-quality public education, financed with public money, for the
benefit of all: the exact commitment that drove the growth of public higher
education in the postwar years. Everybody gets an equal chance to go as far as
their hard work and talent will take them—you know, the American dream.
Everyone who wants it gets to have the kind of mind-expanding, soul-enriching
experience that a liberal arts education provides. We recognize that free,
quality K–12 education is a right of citizenship. We also need to recognize—as
we once did and as many countries still do—that the same is true of higher
education. We have tried aristocracy. We have tried meritocracy. Now it’s time
to try democracy.
William Deresiewicz is
the author of Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and The
Way to a Meaningful Life, coming out
August 19 from Free Press. He taught at Yale from 1998 to 2008.
Your Criticism of My Ivy
League Takedown Further Proves My Point
By William
DeresiewiczPhoto: Bethany
Clarke/Getty Images
My goal in writing "Don't
Send Your Kid to the Ivy League," which appeared last month in The New Republic,
was to start a conversation. That certainly has happened, with a number of
criticisms directed at my piece. My best response is my new book from which the
essay was drawn, Excellent
Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life, where I go into these issues in much greater
depth. I also propose a constructive vision of what college should be about—not
just for the privileged, but everyone—as well as how students can save
themselves from the current system and find their way to a sense of purpose.
The criticisms fall into several categories. The first asks,
What’s your evidence for all these claims? Here is my evidence. I first
sketched out these observations in an essay, "The
Disadvantages of an Elite Education," in 2008. The piece went viral. Since then, it has been
read over a million times—not all at once, but steadily, at the rate, after the
initial surge, of about 10,000 page views a month. In other words, people have
been reading it and passing it along for the last six years, an eternity on the
Internet. It's clearthat I tapped into an enormous hunger to
discuss these issues.
To judge from the hundreds of emails I've received in response to
that piece, that hunger was greatest among young people, students and recent
graduates of selective colleges, almost all of whom have told me some version
of: Thank you for putting my feelings into words. Add to that the hundreds of
students I've met at events (often student-initiated) at campuses across the
country. I've also talked with parents, professors, administrators, older
alumni, and employers. Nearly all have concurred with my observations. So have
many of the people who have also written on these matters—Harry R. Lewis, the
former dean of Harvard College, and Terry Castle, a long-time professor at
Stanford, to name just two.
So that's my evidence: not systematic, but very substantial. I
have spent the last six years listening, thinking, reading, and writing about
these issues, on top of 15 years at the front of Yale and Columbia classrooms.
I've been accused of hypocrisy for having been associated with Ivy League
schools myself but wanting to dissuade others from going. But my recognitions dawned
only slowly, as I realized what the system had been doing to me—and more to the
point, what it was doing to the students in front of me. I feel I have an
obligation to speak out.
Critics also questioned my claims about the extreme psychological
stress (and distress) that the system creates. These kids are doing just
fine, they say. Or: College students have always been stressed out. No, they
haven't—not like this. We are putting these kids under the kind of pressure
that no young person should have to endure, and a lot of them are cracking.
We already know this with respect to high-achieving students in
high school. In The
Price of Privilege,
Madeline Levine cites a raft of troubling statistics: “Preteens and teens from
affluent, well-educated families … experience among the highest rates ofdepression, substance abuse, anxiety disorders, somatic complaints, and unhappiness of any
group of children in this country”; “As many as 22 percent of adolescent girls
from financially comfortable families suffer from clinical depression.” Mental health problems “can be two to five
times more prevalent among private high school juniors and seniors” than among
their public-school counterparts.
There is no reason to believe that the situation improves when
these kids get to college, and plenty of reasons to believe it does not. In a
recent survey—summarized by the American Psychological Association under the
headline “The
Crisis on Campus”—nearly half of college
students reported feelings of hopelessness, while almost a third spoke of
feeling “so depressed that it was difficult to function during the past 12
months.” Convening a task force on student mental health in 2006, Stanford’s
provost wrote that “increasingly, we are seeing students struggling with mental
health concerns ranging from self-esteem issues and developmental disorders to
depression, anxiety, eating disorders, self-mutilation behaviors, schizophrenia
and suicidal behavior.”
The closer you are to these kids, the more you see it. Deans of
students see it. Campus counseling services see it. Professors and instructors
see it, at least the ones who bother to look. And the kids themselves see it,
even if they don't always know what they're looking at. One rebuttal to my article
by a current Yale studentmentioned, in a different connection, that roughly half
of that institution’s undergraduates “access the school’s mental health and
counseling services at some point," without bothering to pause over the
significance of that remarkable fact.
Then there are the arguments against my claims about economic
inequality on selective campuses, the fact that elite higher education acts, on
the whole, to retard rather than promote social mobility. Usually these
criticisms take the form of, essentially, “But I had a working-class roommate!”
I’ve been hearing about this working-class roommate for six years now. But this
is not a matter of conjecture. A study from 2004 (things, if anything, are likely
to have gotten worse by now) found that 75 percent of freshmen at the top 100+
selective colleges come from households in the upper quarter of the income
distribution, 3 percent from the bottom quarter. You had a working-class
roommate, and 25 affluent friends.
It is true that about 50 percent of Ivy League students receive
some form of financial aid. It's also true that most of them are affluent
themselves. In 2007, Harvard capped tuition at 10 percent of income for
families earning up to $180,000. Still, 40 percent of kids are continuing to
pay full fare. An income of $180,000 puts you in the 94th percentile of households, which means that at least 40
percent of Harvard students come from the top 6 percent. The upper class pays
full tuition; the upper middle class receives financial aid; and as for the
tiny remainder, “The function of the (very few) poor people at Harvard,"
as Walter Benn Michaels puts
it, "it is to
reassure the (very many) rich people at Harvard that you can’t just buy your
way into Harvard.”
Another critic pointed out that only 45 percent of kids at Yale
attended private high schools—a number roughly comparable to those at similar
institutions. Yes, but the proportion in the country as a whole is 8 percent. A
recent study found that 100 high schools—about 0.3 percent of the nationwide
total—account for 22 percent of students at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. Of
those hundred, all but six are private, and the ones that aren’t are located in
places like Greenwich and Palo Alto.
Many of my critics are simply so far inside the system that they
cannot recognize how they’ve absorbed the assumptions that it makes about
itself. The Ivy League colleges, one of critic says, are "the best schools
in America—and perhaps the world," and the students who go there
"receive a first-rate education." But those are precisely the claims
that are in question. What is a first-rate education, and do the Ivy League and
its peer institutions deliver one? Are they, in fact, "the best"?
They are the most prestigious, yes. They are the wealthiest, for
sure. Their research may be the finest in the world. But none of those circumstances
tell you that they do a particularly good job educating undergraduates, and the
last one tells you that they probably don't. Their professors are selected for
their scholarship, not their pedagogy. They are actively discouraged from
spending more time than necessary on teaching. Everybody in the academic
profession knows this; the schools have just been very good at hiding it from
families and kids.
I am myself the worst elitist, goes another argument. In fact, I
not only blast our existing elite, as well as the schools that ensure its
self-perpetuation, I call for the effective dismantling of the entire system
through the creation (or re-creation) of free, high-quality public higher
education, paid for by taxes on the wealthiest 10 percent. But the indictment
appears to revolve around two charges.
First, that I'm discouraging lower-income families from aspiring
to send their children to the Ivy Leagues. But if you come from a family of
relatively modest means, you don't need to go to a top-10 school in order to
rise. More importantly, we already know that very few of those lower-income
kids are actually going to get in to an Ivy League school, whatever the
mythology of meritocracy.
Second, that going to college to "build your soul" is
all well and good for the privileged, but most kids have to be practical.
Behind this lies a historical argument: In the 19th century, a liberal arts
education was something that they gave to gentlemen. Now you have to think
about getting a job. But the narrative omits a major chunk of American
history—roughly, the first two-thirds of the 20th century. Central to higher
education, and especially to public higher education, as it developed and
expanded over those years was the notion that what once belonged to gentlemen
should now belong to all.
Nor was it—or is it—an either/or situation: Either a general,
liberal arts education or a specialized, vocational one; either building a soul
or laying the foundation for a career. American higher education, uniquely
among the world's systems, makes room for both. You major in one thing, but you
get to take courses in others. The issue now is not that kids don't or at least
wouldn't want to get a liberal education as well as a practical one (you'd be
surprised what kids are interested in doing, if you give them a chance). The
issue is that the rest of us don't want to pay for it.
That is finally what's at stake here. Are we going to reserve the
benefits of a liberal education for the privileged few, or are we going to
restore the promise of college as we once conceived it? When I say, at the end
of my book, that the time has come to try democracy, that is what I am talking
about.
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