Barack Obama – the guy who gave us a hopelessly muddled health plan incomprehensibly comprised of the good, bad and indefinable and who has asserted more control over our public schools for no known good than any president in history - is now proposing to interfere significantly with college education. As the New York Times reported:
President
Obama announced a set of ambitious proposals on Thursday aimed at
making colleges more accountable and affordable by rating them and
ultimately linking those ratings to financial aid.
A
draft of the proposal, obtained by The New York Times and likely to
cause some consternation among colleges, shows a plan to rate colleges
before the 2015 school year based on measures like tuition, graduation
rates, debt and earnings of graduates, and the percentage of
lower-income students who attend. The ratings would compare colleges
against their peer institutions. If the plan can win Congressional
approval, the idea is to base federal financial aid to students
attending the colleges partly on those rankings.
“There
are all kinds of issues, like deciding how far down the road you are
looking, and which institutions are comparable,” said Terry W. Hartle,
senior vice president of the American Council on Education, a group
representing colleges and universities. “Ultimately, the concern is that
the Department of Education will develop a formula and impose it
without adequate consultation, and that’s what drives campus
administrators nuts.”
Obama described it this way:
"I think we should rate colleges based on opportunity — are they
helping students from all kinds of backgrounds succeed ... and on
outcomes, on their value to students and parents. So that means metrics
like how much debt does the average student leave with? How easy is it
to pay off? How many students graduate on time? How well do those
graduates do in the workforce? Because the answers will help parents and
stdents figure out how much value a college truly offers."
Senator Lamar Alexander sees it somewhat differently:
Washington
needs to be careful about taking a good idea for one state and forcing
all 6,000 institutions of higher education to do the exact same thing,
turning Washington into a sort of national school board for our colleges
and universities
And so does Adam Falk, president of Williams College:
At
Williams College, we've analyzed which educational inputs best predict
progress in these deeper aspects of student learning. The answer is
unambiguous: By far, the factor that correlates most highly with gains
in these skills is the amount of personal contact a student has with
professors. Not virtual contact, but interaction with real, live human
beings, whether in the classroom, or in faculty offices, or in the
dining halls. Nothing else—not the details of the curriculum, not the
choice of major, not the student's GPA—predicts self-reported gains in
these critical capacities nearly as well as how much time a student
spent with professors.
As classes
resume on our nation's campuses, amid anxiety about high tuition,
student debt and other concerns, it's worth examining what we value in
college education. The question warrants consideration, in particular,
following a recent recommendation by distinguished economists, appointed
by the National Academy of Sciences, proposing to define the "output"
of higher education as a combination of credit hours awarded and degrees
earned.
That reduces the work of
colleges to counting how many students they push through the system—a
bit like defining a movie studio's output as the number of feet of raw
footage shot, with no consideration of whether the resulting movies are
any good.
Most of us in higher
education take the long view about the value of what we do. Sure,
students graduate with plenty of facts in their heads. But the
transmission of information is merely the starting point, a critical
tool through which we engage the higher faculties of the mind.
What
really matters is the set of deeper abilities—to write effectively,
argue persuasively, solve problems creatively, adapt and learn
independently—that students develop while in college and use for the
rest of their lives…
Equally misguided
is the common practice of judging a school's success by measuring the
net worth of its alumni. Is a Williams graduate who is teaching
elementary school less successful, less influential, less transformed
than she would be if she had become a banker? There's no reason to think
so, and anyone assessing colleges or setting public policy on that
assumption is being mischievous.
The arrogance of Obama’s
interference in public school education was bad enough and was
accomplished with the aid of a truly unqualified education secretary. As
we described it a few years back:
Between
2003 and 2007 - when Obama's education secretary, Arne Duncan, was
running the Chicago schools - fourth grade math scores in that city rose
6 points, or less than three tenths of a percent. The scores in Chicago
rose only 2 more points than in the state of Illinois at large. Eighth
grade math scores rose 5 points in Chicago and 7 points nationwide
between 2003 and 2007.
The Chicago Tribune reported in October 2008, shortly before Duncan was appointed, that "The percentage of Chicago public high school students who met or exceeded state standards on a test tied to the ACT college-entrance exam dropped for the third consecutive year, according to scores released Friday."…
Duncan - like DC's school chancellor Michelle Rhee - has fostered a dysfunctional rightwing, corporatized system of education that not only isn't working, it is damaging our children as it trains them to be obedient worker-drones incapable of analyzing or understanding what is really going on about them. The dangers of this system include:
- Teaching our children only to give the right answers and not to ask the right questions.
- Grossly limiting education to fact accumulation and basic manipulation of data, leaving little time for analysis, creativity, judgment, philosophy social intelligence, as well as learning about, and participating in, the non-mechanical aspects of life such as art, theater and music. This system deliberately teaches our children not to think.
One of the reasons technocrats like test scores so much is that it saves them the trouble of dealing with the complexities of real education. They parade seemingly objective numbers (and hide them when they're not favorable) and strut around with a overblown media status driven by public relations rather than experience and fact.
The
damage being done to our students in the public schools amounts to
nationalized child abuse. Now Obama wants to wield unconstitutional
powers over our colleges and universities as well.The Chicago Tribune reported in October 2008, shortly before Duncan was appointed, that "The percentage of Chicago public high school students who met or exceeded state standards on a test tied to the ACT college-entrance exam dropped for the third consecutive year, according to scores released Friday."…
Duncan - like DC's school chancellor Michelle Rhee - has fostered a dysfunctional rightwing, corporatized system of education that not only isn't working, it is damaging our children as it trains them to be obedient worker-drones incapable of analyzing or understanding what is really going on about them. The dangers of this system include:
- Teaching our children only to give the right answers and not to ask the right questions.
- Grossly limiting education to fact accumulation and basic manipulation of data, leaving little time for analysis, creativity, judgment, philosophy social intelligence, as well as learning about, and participating in, the non-mechanical aspects of life such as art, theater and music. This system deliberately teaches our children not to think.
One of the reasons technocrats like test scores so much is that it saves them the trouble of dealing with the complexities of real education. They parade seemingly objective numbers (and hide them when they're not favorable) and strut around with a overblown media status driven by public relations rather than experience and fact.
It is important, however, to bear in mind that this has little to do with traditional politics. In fact, the destruction of public education has been a remarkably bipartisan affair, in part because both major parties are getting money from the school wreckers.
This is a case study in the takeover of politics by class and culture. Obama and Duncan reflect a massive change in the character of Washington – from a political culture to one controlled by a gradocracy of lawers, MBAs, economists, data drones, process perverts and raving regulators. They are stunningly weak in wisdom, judgment, imagination, social skills, mediation, and comprehension of the ecology of human existence. As long as they have the numbers and the rules, everything will be fine.
There are, for example, some 43,000 lawyers in the Washington area, a 65% increase in just 15 years. There are few in the capital today who would appreciate De Tocqueville’s assessment that lawyers are a "counterpoise" to democratic government: "They constantly endeavor to turn it away from its real direction by means that are foreign to its nature."
Meanwhile the number of MBAs in the country has increased 310% since the 1970s, And to what end?
Jermie D. Cullip describes a simpler time:
"From
1950 to 1959, the total number of females employed increased by 18%.
The standard of living during the fifties also steadily rose. Most
people expected to own a car and a house, and believed that life for
their children would be even better. . . The number of college students
doubled. Getting a college education was no longer for the rich or elite
"The
decade of the fifties was a decade of major breakthroughs in
technology. James Watson and Francis Crick won the Nobel Prize for
decoding the molecular structure of DNA. Tuberculosis had all but
disappeared, and Jonas Salk's vaccine was wiping out polio in the United
States. . .
"Over the decade the
housing supply increased 27 percent . . . Growth in the economy also led
to increasing popularity of other financial intermediaries. Life
insurance companies flourished for the first half of the decade and a
large number of new private firms entered the market to absorb the
excesses of personal savings. Savings and Loan Association holdings of
mortgage loans during the decade clearly demonstrate the boom in
construction at this time. In 1950 $13.6 billion was held rising to
$60.1 billion in 1960. Another important growth in the 1950s capital
markets was in pension funds. This industry grew from $11 billion in
1950 to $44 billion in 1960.
All in
all not a bad decade to be in if you were running a business. So much
so, in fact, that some began griping about it all in books like The
Organization Man and plays like Death of a Salesman.
But here is
the truly amazing part - given what we have been taught in recent years:
America did it all as its universities turned out less than 5,000 MBAs a
year.Now, the number is over 100,000 new MBAs a year during the worst economic crisis since the great depression.
Which is how we come to have a highly educated yet frequently unwise president proposing a rating system for our colleges and universities based on things such as the salaries of those who graduate from them.
It is hard to imagine a less intelligent way to rate a university. Do we really need more high paid and ineffectual MBAs and lawyers? What about lower salaried teachers, social workers, small business creators, mediators, and, of yes, decent politicians? How much will a college suffer for daring to provide us with such graduates?
And, like Obama’s other proposals of complexity replacing common sense, there are issues that are hardly mentioned. For example, buried in a Washington Post story:
Now,
the federal government measures how many students graduate within four
years or six years of starting college. But it only measures that for
students who are first-timers, who are enrolled full-time and who don’t
transfer from one institution to another, omitting a huge share of the
college population. Millions of students are part-timers. Community
colleges with excellent records of getting students into prestigious
four-year schools are not rewarded for their efforts if those students
fail to pick up an associate’s degree before they transfer. Nor are
four-year colleges that give transfer students or former dropouts a
second chance and help them get a bachelor’s degree.
Our country
is on the down slope and one of the major reasons is that we put too
much faith in number bangers, regulation wigglers and picayune
processors.We have limited education to fact accumulation and basic manipulation of data, leaving little time for analysis, creativity, judgment, philosophy, social intelligence, as well as learning about, and participating in, the non-mechanical aspects of life such as art, theater and music. This system deliberately teaches our children not to think.