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townhall.com Printer-friendly version December 8, 2004
College costs have risen dramatically over the last several decades. In many
cases, it's difficult to find a college where per-student costs are under
$20,000 each year. Most often, tuition doesn't measure the true cost because
taxpayer and donor subsidies pay part of the expenses. While costs are rising,
education quality is in precipitous decline, particularly at the undergraduate
level. Part of the reason is the political climate on college campuses, where
professors use their classrooms for proselytizing and indoctrination and teach
classes that have little or no academic content. Let's look at some of it. In a study to be published in Academic Questions, sociologist Charlotta
Stern and economist Daniel Klein found in a random national sample of 1,678
university professors that Democratic professors outnumber Republican professors
3 to 1 in economics, 28 to 1 in sociology, and 30 to 1 in anthropology. As
George Will said in his Washington Post column, "Academia, Stuck to the Left"
(Nov. 28, 2004): "Many campuses are intellectual versions of one-party nations."
That strong campus leftist bias goes a long way to explain mindless
university courses like: "Canine Cultural Studies" (University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill), "I Like Ike, But I Love Lucy" (Harvard), "History of
Electronic Dance Music" (UCLA), "Rock and Roll" (University of Massachusetts)
and "Hip-Hop: Beats, Rhyme and Culture" (George Mason University). There are
many other examples documented by Accuracy in Academia. A Zogby survey was commissioned by the National Association of Scholars
(NAS) to compare the general cultural knowledge of today's college seniors to
that of yesteryear's high school graduates. The questions for the survey were
drawn from those asked by the Gallup organization in 1955 covering literature,
music, science, geography and history. The results were reported in a NAS
publication titled "Today's College Students and Yesteryear's High School
Grads." It concludes that "Contemporary college seniors scored on average little
or no higher than the high-school graduates of a half-century ago on a battery
of 15 questions assessing general cultural knowledge." A 1990 Gallup survey for the National Endowment of the Humanities,
given to a representative sample of 700 college seniors, found that 25 percent
did not know that Columbus landed in the Western Hemisphere before the year
1500, 42 percent could not place the Civil War in the correct half-century, and
31 percent thought Reconstruction came after World War II. In 1993, a Department of Education survey found that, among college
graduates, 50 percent of whites and more than 80 percent of blacks couldn't
state in writing the argument made in a newspaper column or use a bus schedule
to get on the right bus, 56 percent could not calculate the right tip, 57
percent could not figure out how much change they should get back after putting
down $3 to pay for a 60-cent bowl of soup and a $1.95 sandwich, and over 90
percent could not use a calculator to find the cost of carpeting a room. But not
to worry. The American Council of Trustees and Alumni's 1999 survey of seniors
at the nation's top 55 liberal arts colleges and universities found that 98
percent could identify rap artist Snoop Doggy Dogg and Beavis and Butt-Head, but
only 34 percent knew George Washington was the general at the battle of
Yorktown. Americans as donors and taxpayers have been exceedingly generous to our
universities. Given our universities' gross betrayal of trust, Americans should
rethink their generosity as well as rethink who serves on boards of trustees
that, in dereliction of duty, permit universities to become hotbeds of political
activism and academic fraud. There are a few universities where there's still
integrity and academic honesty, and they don't cost an arm and a leg. Among them
are: Grove City College, Pa., Hillsdale College, Mich., Franciscan University, Steubenville,
Ohio, and others listed at the Web page of Young America's Foundation.
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc. Contact Walter E. Williams | Read Williams's biography townhall.com
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