Roy Exum: College Is Changing

  • Wednesday, May 12, 2021
  • Roy Exum
Roy Exum
Roy Exum

Over the last few years, I have sensed America’s colleges are changing for the bad. Here is UTC with a reported 50 percent graduation rate and if you send a child to the University of Tennessee it’s being told that if he matriculates for six years, there is a totally unacceptable graduation rate of 60 percent, this where a diploma makes you “a Vol for life.”  Far, far worse, American colleges are perpetuating an insane loan program where the average student owes $30,000 before most of them ever have a job.

Chattanooga’s restaurants are clamoring for waiters.

Walmart is paying nearly $15/hour for part-time, and the state of Alabama just ceased the $300/week extra unemployment benefit because it is far easier to be on ‘relief’ and play tennis every afternoon than earn a living.  Do you know how many recent college students have been “gaming” Uncle Sam? There are even some graduates who are using unemployment to pay back college loans… You just watch – the freeloaders have taken it too far.

Victor Davis Hanson is a rarity. He’s a college professor, among his more laudable qualities, at Cal State and a Fellow at Stanford. What makes him the diamond in a dust pile is that he is a conservative writer with uncommonly good sense. He bemoans the fact that the great colleges in America have so badly abused their grandeur in this, the ‘cancel age,’ that they will stand for nothing and fall for anything.

The state pours money into colleges where whatever they falsely promise versus our poorly performing state’s high schools is a lie. The high schools are the key to educational performance, yet our state colleges are led by bozos, taught by clowns and cannot yield results for the millions the legislature burns year after year for coo-coo results. Build new high schools, teach everybody sentence structure and civics as a language, the Bible as history and morals/ethics for extra credits. Then consider college, its huge cost, and its final benefits.

You may be surprised … I’m talking, really surprised …

Just read this essay by Dr. Hanson:

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AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES HAVE LOST THEIR PRESTIGE

By Victor Davis Hanson, a writer for Tribune Media. This piece appeared in last week’s May 5-11 editions of the Epoch Times and in other newspapers across the country.)

Nothing is stranger than the contemporary American university.

Not long ago, Americans used to idolize their universities. Indeed, in science, math, engineering, medicine and business, many of these meritocratic departments and schools remain among the top-ranked in the world.

Top-notch higher education explains much of the current scientific, technological and commercial excellence of the United States.

After World War II — won in part due to superior American scientific research, production and logistics — a college degree became a prerequisite for a successful career. The GI Bill enabled some 8 million returning vets to go to college. Most graduated to good jobs.

The university from the late 1940s to 1960 was a rich resource of continuing education. It introduced the world’s great literature, from Homer to Tolstoy, to the American middle classes.

But today’s universities and colleges bear little if any resemblance to postwar higher education. Even during the tumultuous 1960s, when campuses were plagued by radical protests and periodic violence, there was still institutionalized free speech. An empirical college curriculum mostly survived the chaos of the ’60s.

But it is gone now.

Instead, imagine a place where the certification of educational excellence, the Bachelor of Arts degree, is no guarantee that a graduate can speak, write or communicate coherently or think inductively.

Imagine a place that requires applicants to submit high school grade-point averages and standardized test results but doesn’t require its own graduates to pass a basic uniform competency test.

Imagine a place where after an initial trial period, a minority of elite employees receive lifetime job guarantees.

Imagine a place supposedly devoted to equity where only 30 percent of the faculty are privileged enough to be tenure-tracked. The other 70 percent are second-class, categorized as part-time or “contingent” faculty. And they receive a fraction of the compensation per hour of instruction as their more elite counterparts.

Imagine a place that cherishes student interaction and criticism of the “establishment,” yet the ratio of instructors to administrators is about one to one. The money devoted to non-teaching administrative costs is now about equal to the money devoted to classroom instruction.

Imagine a place where “diversity” is the professed institutional ethos, while studies reveal that liberal faculty outnumber their conservative counterparts by over 10 to 1.

Imagine a liberal place where in 2021 race can still be used as a criterion in selecting and rejecting applicants, choosing prospective dorm roommates, organizing segregated dorms and restricting access to special places on campus.

Imagine a progressive place that once renounced unconstitutional “loyalty oaths” but now rebrands them as “diversity pledges” and requires reeducation and indoctrination training.

Imagine a place with non-taxable endowments that restricts free speech and expression. Nonprofit universities make it impossible for some speakers to lecture, and often suspend constitutionally protected due process for students facing particular allegations.

Imagine a place loudly devoted to income, capital and marketplace equity measured against the reality that 800 of the largest colleges and universities hold more than $600 billion in endowments. Yet just 20 elite universities account for half that total. And just four — Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Princeton — account for almost a quarter of all endowment funds.

Imagine a liberal place that has upped its tuition and total costs far beyond the rate of inflation, with its graduates now collectively owing $1.7 trillion in student loan debt. There is little hope that many of these student debtors will ever pay back their obligations, which average more than $30,000 each.

Imagine a place that has institutionalized human rights but welcomes nearly 400,000 students from human rights-violating China — a great many of whom are the offspring of elite Communist Party members who provide a lucrative source of university income.

Imagine a place where faculty and students now selectively change the names of campus streets, centers and buildings that honored supposedly illiberal, long-dead donors, graduates, and former heroes. Yet curiously, universities never alter their marquee founding brand names. Were founders or original funders such as Leland Stanford, Elihu Yale and Lord Jeffery Amherst not as illiberal as Father Junipero Serra, Earl Warren and Woodrow Wilson, whose names have been canceled on some college campuses?

As long as universities produced highly educated and open-minded graduates at a reasonable cost and kept politics out of the lecture hall, Americans didn’t care much about peculiarities such as tenure, legacy admissions, untaxed endowments, rebellious students and quirky faculty.

But once they began to charge exorbitantly, educate poorly, politick continuously, indebt millions of people and act hypocritically, universities turned off Americans.

Just as a sermonizing Hollywood grates when it no longer can make good movies, a once hallowed but now self-righteous university seems hollow when it charges so much for so little.

(Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness.)

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NOTE: The Epoch Times is a weekly newspaper, delivered by the U.S. Postal Service, and it has become an anticipated gift every week. It is a real-to-life newspaper and you can get more information at EpochSubscritions.com

royexum@aol.com

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