• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Subsidizing Education

I agree that alot of our failures could be chalked up to laziness. I don't blame the kids though; if you can get away with it... why not?

Of course, in countries like Japan it's actually shameful to be stupid, in america it's basically encouraged...

I knida like Ontario's new solution: No drivers licenses for high-school dropouts (well, at least not for a couple of years) :)
 
Thirstyson said:
.... meant america in the continental sense.

Sticking the key word "North" in usually helps.
 
Brad Sallows said:
>I think that the growing importance (indeed, necessity) of university for an increasing number of jobs is one reason why it should be cheap.

What percentage of people do you think merit a university education?  Why do you think they should be subsidized by the percentage who are not going to enjoy the lifestyle that higher education and higher incomes tend to promote?

I personally would like to see a Post Secondary education plan that rewards effort.  My idea is that the government should guarantee full scholarships to all students who achieve an average of 85% through grades 9 to 12 and guarantee Vocational Educations to those who average 70% or more.

This would be a costly plan, no doubt but if all the universities and businesses and corporations, service clubs etc, that offer scholarships put their money toward it it would lessen the cost somewhat and the benefits to the nation would in the end be substantial.

This plan would by no means limit a university education to those that achieved the requisite marks, it could still be bought and paid for as per usual but it would enable anyone who worked hard to get an education and rise above whatever accident of birth happened to plague them.
 
Good luck.  My guess is that one of the benefits your idea will reap is grade inflation.

A truism I have a great deal of faith in is this: the more you tax something, the less of it you get.

There's a corollary: the more money you give away, the more you see of the criteria to receive it.
 
OK.  I know this thread is kind of stale now but as I was taking another look at it I fixated on a comment that the job market need more people with the skills that university offers.  On that ground it would be a "collective" benefit to the state to fund people to the post-secondary level.  At the same time such a benefit is also a benefit to the individual that may not be available to the state if the individual chooses to vote with their feet and leave the country.

Fair enough.

Here's the thing though - if the market is requiring more skills why is the state-funded pre-university education system removing "content" (another word for skills) from the curriculum?  Why is calculus being dropped, logic trimmed, history shortened, sciences short-changed? 

In the name of keeping teacher's salaries down, cutting days and hours, not wishing to upset kids that find the sledding tough, failure to enforce standards, etc., the amount of information transferred and the quality of the instruction has arguably devalued the high school diploma.  It is for this reason that university educated individuals are required as much as anything.  I think that a fair argument could be made that a high school graduate (from a good school) in the 40s and 50s was as good "value for money" as far as business was concerned as a university graduate is today.

Flame wars not wanted here. Not a "good old days vs young whippersnappers".  I think that both the teachers and the students can be as good as they ever were. 

My beef is that the high schools (my daughter is in grade 9, my son 12) are not working the kids as hard as they might.  In the case of my kids it results in boredom.  Their time in high-school, and for that matter grade school, is underutilized.
 
Kirkhill said:
OK.  I know this thread is kind of stale now but as I was taking another look at it I fixated on a comment that the job market need more people with the skills that university offers.  On that ground it would be a "collective" benefit to the state to fund people to the post-secondary level.  At the same time such a benefit is also a benefit to the individual that may not be available to the state if the individual chooses to vote with their feet and leave the country.

Fair enough.

Here's the thing though - if the market is requiring more skills why is the state-funded pre-university education system removing "content" (another word for skills) from the curriculum?  Why is calculus being dropped, logic trimmed, history shortened, sciences short-changed? 

In the name of keeping teacher's salaries down, cutting days and hours, not wishing to upset kids that find the sledding tough, failure to enforce standards, etc., the amount of information transferred and the quality of the instruction has arguably devalued the high school diploma.  It is for this reason that university educated individuals are required as much as anything.  I think that a fair argument could be made that a high school graduate (from a good school) in the 40s and 50s was as good "value for money" as far as business was concerned as a university graduate is today.

If you mean that their level of education/skill at that time was sufficient for their tasks then yes, I'd agree. I have no doubt that there are plenty of high school graduates these days that could probably do a raft of different jobs which require university degrees. The fact remains, though, that the employers are requiring a degree and whether it's really necessary or not is immaterial - they want what they want and there's really nothing anyone can do to change their minds.

Flame wars not wanted here. Not a "good old days vs young whippersnappers".  I think that both the teachers and the students can be as good as they ever were. 

My beef is that the high schools (my daughter is in grade 9, my son 12) are not working the kids as hard as they might.   In the case of my kids it results in boredom.  Their time in high-school, and for that matter grade school, is underutilized.

I agree - having gone through highschool during Harris' glorious (  ::) ) reconstruction of the Ontario education system, I can say without a doubt that things have degenerated. Elimination of OAC (Gr.13) in Ontario, considering the university obsession that employers seem to have, was stupid. Maybe it was just my school, but I found that the standards demanded and tasks assigned in OAC better prepared me for university than those in grade 12, which was geared to everyone. From what I remember, OAC was intended specifically as a prep year for university. If you didn't plan on university, you could receive a different diploma in grade 12. In my mind more university demand = more demand for preparation in high school but maybe I'm nuts.
 
GA:

Harris had little to do with this generalized problem.  My kids are going to school in BC and Harris hasn't been here recently.  More to the point I have relatives and friends in Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta that seem to find similar problems with their systems.

By the way Grade 12 used to get you your Ontario Secondary School Graduation Diploma which would get you into a college like Sir Sandford Fleming while Grade 13 would get you the Ontario Secondary School Honours Graduation Diploma which was necessary for University.  At my school at least I found that when I got to University (in Ontario) I was repeating the stuff I had been taught in Grade 13.  And this was almost 30 years ago - Oh God.

On point though.  It is not just a case that the skills taught were sufficient for the tasks required.  I actually don't believe that the necessary skills have changed that much (reference 25 years in the labour force, much of it designing operating systems and instructing people how to use them, many of them people with no english, little education and whose employers have had to instruct them on how to use a western flush toilet and toilet paper.)

University was not a place to learn skills.  It certainly wasn't a place to learn how to learn.  It was a place to gain knowledge. 

Having worked with people of all levels of education, what you learn in university 20 to 25 years ago (and that includes me) is less value than what you learn in the intervening years.  Someone who is able to put to good use their 25 years of experience but has no university education, is of more use to me as an employer than some one who went to school 25 years ago and stopped learning the day he graduated.  The only difficulty I have is that they can't produce a piece of paper from an independent 3rd party vouching as to the knowledge and skills that they have.

Better use can be made of the time available in High School - for those kids willing to utilize it.  For those kids unwilling or unable to utilize the service - well there I do think there needs to be public subsidy of their "second chance" once they realize the need.


 
Kirkhill said:
GA:

Harris had little to do with this generalized problem.  My kids are going to school in BC and Harris hasn't been here recently.  More to the point I have relatives and friends in Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta that seem to find similar problems with their systems.

Yeah, from what I gather, education is deemed a problem everywhere but Harris did little to help matters in Ontario. Although, as much as people tend to knock education, we have a generally well-educated populous. The sad thing is that one of the areas in which most people seem to be lacking knowledge is Canada itself - history, geography, government, etc.

By the way Grade 12 used to get you your Ontario Secondary School Graduation Diploma which would get you into a college like Sir Sandford Fleming while Grade 13 would get you the Ontario Secondary School Honours Graduation Diploma which was necessary for University.  At my school at least I found that when I got to University (in Ontario) I was repeating the stuff I had been taught in Grade 13.  And this was almost 30 years ago - Oh God.

It operated the same way up until they ditched OAC/Gr.13. I found the same thing - stuff I'd done in HS, I ended up repeating a bit in my first year of university. I don't necessarily see that as a bad thing, though - it just ensured I did well.

On point though.  It is not just a case that the skills taught were sufficient for the tasks required.  I actually don't believe that the necessary skills have changed that much (reference 25 years in the labour force, much of it designing operating systems and instructing people how to use them, many of them people with no english, little education and whose employers have had to instruct them on how to use a western flush toilet and toilet paper.)

In many occupations, I have no doubt that you're absolutely correct. There will always be plenty of occupations (possibly even the majority) in which it's almost entirely a matter of experience vs. knowledge (schooling knowledge, I mean). My dad dropped out of high school and went on to become a senior VP at Global Television - his professional training consisted of working under people who showed him the ropes and gave him the opportunities necessary to develop the skills and knowledge necessary for the field. I seriously doubt he would have done any better (and possibly even worse, if you count the time out of the workforce) had he gone to university.

University was not a place to learn skills.  It certainly wasn't a place to learn how to learn.  It was a place to gain knowledge. 

I've found that the "learning how to learn" thing does apply, at least to me. I've also found that my capacity for critical thinking has been helped quite a bit. There's also a different mindset that I've found with my friends/family/etc. that have gone to university - not better/worse than those who haven't, just different. I don't really know how to put it - it's like prostitution: I can't explain it but I know it when I see it. 

Having worked with people of all levels of education, what you learn in university 20 to 25 years ago (and that includes me) is less value than what you learn in the intervening years.

I'll take your word for it, as I have very little experience to go on. I believe you're right, though you can't discount the value of the knowledge you receive in relation to occupations which require specific, specialised knowledge (IE the sciences, IT, etc).

Someone who is able to put to good use their 25 years of experience but has no university education, is of more use to me as an employer than some one who went to school 25 years ago and stopped learning the day he graduated.  The only difficulty I have is that they can't produce a piece of paper from an independent 3rd party vouching as to the knowledge and skills that they have.

I think that might be a contributing factor in the over-valuation of degrees - they provide a credible statement of a person's knowledge (or assumed level thereof). I would think that a well-checked reference list would probably achieve the same end, though it's more time consuming.

I wonder sometimes whether another aspect of "degree popularity" is that while you can take a high school graduate and put him in an occupation which generally requires a degree, and he'll do the job relatively well, you likely get the same level of performance from a university/college educated person except they come into the profession with a broad knowledge of the subject matter and the major concepts/techniques/approaches within it. What I mean is that the learning curve and breadth/depth of knowledge would be different at the get-go. Of course, it would vary quite a bit depending on the occupation - a sales position could probably be filled just as well by a highschool grad with natural charisma and ambition just as well as some university grad with a degree in marketing or business. Conversely, a lab technician, lawyer, doctor, psychologist, engineer, or physicist absolutely requires the knowledge gained through post-secondary education.

My own field of study (and the only one on which I can really speculate, and even then only from an under-grad perspective) - political science - is one of those "grey" degrees - it's kind of specialised but it's by no means as much so as the hard sciences. You could spend 3 hours trying to explain a concept in quantum physics to someone (I've spent as long trying to grasp them and failed) but it would probably only take 10 minutes for a political science concept, as much of it is relatively intuitive. Explaining political realism to someone would probably evoke a "Well, duh..." response, but it's the implications/flaws of it that are of importance. Developing the knowledge base and critical thinking capacity to identify flaws, alternative approaches, and overriding principles is a large part of what I think university can provide. For example, the main applications of a poli-sci degree are in policy and government(analysis/formulation), academia, journalism (political analyst/commentator), and apparently intelligence work. You could take a highschool grad and put him/her in any of those occupations and might do relatively well but the learning curve would be steep on the more esoteric stuff (terminology, paradigms, concepts, etc) and his exposure would likely be limited to the predominant approaches of whatever institution or organization he worked for.

That being said, it's likely just as possible that a degree can force "inside the box" thinking as much as "outside the box", which it's oft-touted to do. Economics (from what exposure I've had) seems to be one area which produces a uniformity of paradigmatic approach. I always hear the "universities just brainwash you into left-wing thinking" line (especially in relation to social sciences) but I've had quite a different experience and I'm at one of the most political (and left-wing) schools in the country (Concordia). Maybe political science is different, I can't say since I haven't studied the other social sciences in depth. I can count on one hand the number of poli-sci profs I've had that have had an identifiably leftist bias and of those, I can count only one or two that actually let it into their teaching. I've actually become more right-wing since I went to university (if you can believe it).

Anyway, I'll turn the rant off. (I hope I haven't derailed the thread... redirect if necessary. Sorry. ;) )

Better use can be made of the time available in High School - for those kids willing to utilize it.  For those kids unwilling or unable to utilize the service -well there I do think there needs to be public subsidy of their "second chance" once they realize the need.

I agree that high school time could be much more productive. I'm not a fan of pigeon-holing kids too early on through occupational education "streaming", but a wider variety of courses and higher requisites for things like language, math, and the sciences would help. Develop the basic assets that help with any occupation while providing the means for exploring different areas (including trades, the exposure to which seems lacking in most high schools). More co-op programs would be great as well. The problem, as it always is, is funding. And of course, you only get out of it what you put in - no matter how many courses and programs you institute, you'll never be able to make the unwilling learn what they don't want to learn. I guess that's where your "second chance" idea comes into play and I agree that public subsidy is necessary (not necessarily FULL subsidy, but enough to make it accessible to a majority without imposing serious financial burdens), most especially for those who would otherwise be unable to go.

 
I am (no surprise) with Kirkhill on this. I was tweaked some time ago by an essay by Jerry Pournell decrying the state of education in the US, and his description of education he received in rural Tennessee in the 1940's, which was far more rigorous than anything available today. As a matter of personal interest, I began looking up old textbooks, course materials and so on from primary schooling in the past. The results were rather amazing to me, up until the early 1960's, grade school children were given a very deep and focused education. I remember feeling rather embarrassed looking at some of the test material and realizing I would be unable to do any of it. I am not talking about Latin grammer either.

Kids are not dumb, and there are certainly motivated teachers (or even Army NCO's) who could cover that material in an effective manner. Rather, what has happened was a shift in attitude which somehow trivialized what had been proven to work in the past, and a constant lowering of the standards to cover the fact that the "new order" doesn't produce results. Even in the many years I have been training soldiers, it is fairly evident the quality of the graduates coming at me now is far lower than in the 1990s, based on reading their written work, their difficulty comprehending oral instruction (i.e. orders) and listening to their speaking. These poor kids can't rub ideas together to create fire because they have no idea how to organize their thoughts, or lay out their arguments in logical order to support their premise (most would not know a premise if it jumped out of the woods and dragged their friends screaming back into the brush). With this lack of grounding, University should be a complete waste of time, yet many graduate and with high marks. What does THAT tell you about University?

The tendency in the Army to teach using the PowerPoint ranger technique doesn't help, and from what I have seen in public schools, something very similar seems to be going on as well. Thank goodness there are private schools which use alternative techniques, my children are articulate, literate and numerate far beyond their public school peers. Ontario spends about $8000/child per year on primary and secondary education, and these kids are roundly thumped by Albertans (who are far behind on funding/child) or even European and Japanese children on standardized tests.

Public money is simply being wasted here, the parents should be paying tution directly to the school of their choice and the extra millions or billions of tax dollars siphoned off to support the bureaucracy returned to them. Universities would benefit from having educated students to work with, and a degree would actually mean something. The workforce would also be qualitatively improved, and the idea you need to have "idiots with degrees" (credentialism) to support an advanced economy would get tossed on the ash heap of history, where it belongs.
 
There are some very good points being made here.

I think people are forgetting some things that have changed since the 60's - class sizes have doubled so our teachers are now wrangling classes of 30+ kids. Back in the middle of the 20th century, classes were smaller, teachers had more one-on-one time with the kids and were able to spend the time needed to teach things. Not so many kids were passed by, given the "oh, well we don't want Johnny to feel left-behind and awkward as the largest kid in grade 1" speech. If you passed, you passsed. If you didn't, you repeated a year.

As well today, a lot of kids are being 'diagnosed' with ADD/ADHD/etc,etc,etc. Funding has been cut for assistant teachers which leaves our teachers trying to teach to a class of 35 kids and 12 or more are 'special needs'.

Locally, school districts are closing schools because their attendance is dropping by 60 kids, so they shove them into another school that's already bursting at the seams. Teachers in BC were forced back to work with a lousy contract by a government who denied their previous contract.

My daughter has 3-4 more years before she enters the school system and I'm really hoping that by then things will have shaped up. In the area I live in it's not so bad, but it's becoming THE place for young parents to move to. In 4 years, will my girl's Kindergarten teacher be teaching 20 kids or 36 kids? There's a difference for sure (as anyone who's taught a military course knows).

As a parent I'm going to do all I can to ensure my daughter gets the most out of her education and I'm going to help her with homework and the like, as MY parents did. But to lump the blame totally on the government, bemoaning the lack (or surplus) of subsidies is not taking into account the whole picture.

It's partly the parent's job to ensure the child is learning. It's partly the teacher's job to teach to all children. And it's partly the government's job to ensure the funding for teachers, assistants and schools are there. The three together will ensure that with any luck, our children will be able to carry on to higher education and get the jobs that the world is evolving. I think Gretzky said it best, "I don't go to where the puck is, I go to where it's going to be." If we can see where the world is going to be, then our kids won't be left behind.

M :brickwall:
 
With respect WCST,  while I agree with your points about left behind syndrome, ADD/ADHD, and special needs teachers, I fundamentally disagree with your assertion that classes were smaller in the 1960's. While not having a complete recall of class size I do recall classes with 5 or 6 rows of desks each with 6 or 7 desks per row and all filled.  30 to 40 students would be the norm and, in High School, classes that couldn't attract more than 20 students (Latin and German as examples at our school) routinely got cut from the curriculum.

On your other point though about,
"oh, well we don't want Johnny to feel left-behind and awkward..."
there we have agreement. In the interest of salving pride we have sacrificed the system.  In the interest of efficiency our schools were differentiated.  High performers were streamed within their grades.  Low performers failed.  The High School was split into 5yr (university bound) students, 4 yr (college and work force) students and 2 yr (apprenticeship and special needs) students.  In addition there were institutionalized students that needed special care and may never have "entered" society.  There was some "bathwater" within the system that probably needed to be changed.  The "baby", however, was sound.

The key issue you raised was the broadening definition of "special",  12 out of a population of 35 is a pretty large group of special individuals,  the pandering to their needs, and the inefficiencies associated with trying to treat everyone one individually to assure equality of outcome as opposed to equality of opportunity.

One teacher can effectively communicate a lesson to a roomful of 200 motivated individuals.  At the other end of the spectrum 10 people may not be able to get through to someone that doesn't want to learn, or is incapable of learning.

 
I don't know if I agree with the assertion that the work in highschool has been the same over the decades.  My room mate is currently in his education practicum (secondary school sciences) and he's amazed at how much the curriculum has changed in the half of a decade since he's been in gradeschool; topics are being pushed down so what was once taught to him in grade 11 is now taught in grades 10 or even 9.  What was once university material is filling the graduating years. 
Maybe this relates to the problems?  When I was in highschool I definitely noted that it was not catered to those who actually wanted to learn.  The quality of education was based just high enough to get the most number of people to pass as possible.  I think that this might be exacerbated by the increase of new information in the highschool setting compounded by the decrease in enforcing 'the basics': More Johnnies are being left farther behind.  The lack of work that had to be done in highschool classes was often pathetic as courses were down-geared due to the abilities of the majority in the class-and this was not due to the students' effort in understanding, it was totally due to the lack of effort.  Many students go to school expecting to be spoon-fed and not having to do any actual work.  I think parents play a role in this.  Schools should not be considered to be a daycare.  Parents have to take a role in the education of their children and enforce some effort. 
Kirkhill:  In regards to your children being underutilized at school I'd recommend maybe looking into other programs such as IB and AP.  Some of these intensive courses count for university credits.  I don't know exactly how the programs work as I went to a ghetto highschool and didn't even hear of these until I came to university.  Many of my friends completed courses in these programs and I have never heard that they weren't challenging.

edit: spelling.
 
These observations seem to fit a lot of people who pass through Recruit and Basic training (or whatever they are calling it this week). BMQ instructors; beware! I can personally vouch for this, Fanshawe College had to install fencing to prevent students from jaywalking from the college to the bus stop and strip mall across the street. The street happens to be Oxford street, a major traffic artery which is five lanes (four plus one turning lane) wide at that point! Taxpayers subsidize up to 70% of the cost of their education, yet they cannot figure out not crossing the street at the crosswalk is dangerous?

If this is the end result of our educational system, then NO AMOUNT of money will fix it in its current form.

http://freewillblog.com/  March 27, 2006

Children are our future, unless we can stop them now!

Despite being relatively young myself, one of the recurring themes at Free Will is the perpetuation of childhood well beyond childhood, or, to put it another way, grumbling like an old man about "those kids today". Today, I saw what had to be a thirteen year old being pushed around in a shopping cart at Wal-Mart. Last night, I was looking for an article on an entirely different subject and happened to run across this one from 2004.

    She seemed the perfect fit. About a year and a half ago, managers at Slack Barshinger, a Chicago advertising agency, hired a recent graduate of a local college for a paid three-month internship.

    She did just fine -- until the first month went by. That's when she started moping around the office, spending much of her time complaining about her tumultuous romance.

    Supervisors tried to tell her the facts of work life.

    "We explained that you can't walk into a meeting crying about your boyfriend," said Dana Kessler, senior account manager. "We talked about appropriate behavior and solutions that would work."

    When the behavior continued, Kessler talked to the intern again -- and then again.

    "It got to the point that we couldn't put her in front of a client, or even a senior member of the team, because her behavior was so unpredictable," Kessler said.

    When the three months ended, the intern -- who had wanted a full-time job -- was not asked to return.

    It is hardly a secret that interns come cheaper than full-time employees, making them especially attractive to small businesses, and demand for them has been growing in recent years....

    But hiring college students as interns does carry risks. They can show up late for work, answer phone calls with insufficient grace and let school assignments get in the way of their job duties.

    "There are a lot of hidden costs," said Elizabeth Saunders, chairman and co-founder of Ashton Partners, an investor relations firm in Chicago, which has one paid intern on staff.

    And while such transgressions are usually little more than inconveniences, they can have more serious consequences. In 1995, Marty Kotis, chief executive of Kotis Properties, a real-estate firm in Greensboro, North Carolina, let a new intern sit in as a reporter for a local newspaper interviewed him.

    When the story appeared, Kotis was taken aback by its negative tone. He later found out that the intern, who had been sitting out of his line of vision, had been rolling her eyes at many of the reporter's questions.

    "She told me she was offended by the way the intern acted," he said.

    One of the trickiest tasks for employers is sizing up an intern's level of competence. Joyce Gioia, president of the Herman Group, a management consulting company in Greensboro that specializes in trend forecasting, once hired a college student who claimed bookkeeping expertise. But when she checked the intern's work, "everything was a mess," she said. "The numbers didn't add up."...

    Unrealistic expectations for interns seem to be common among small-business owners. Lisa Mackenzie recalls how two years ago she asked an intern at her marketing services firm in Portland, Oregon, to complete a marketing research study on a new technology. After a few weeks, the intern handed in 500 pages of unorganized information....

    Dan Cunningham, founder of Dan's Chocolates, a chocolate maker in Braintree, Massachusetts, has his own bag of tricks for testing applicants, like setting up early-morning interviews to see whether they arrive on time and keeping track of how prompt they are in sending him the paperwork he requests.

    No matter how carefully managers scrutinize candidates for internships, a bad egg can sometimes sneak past them. Last summer, a student hired by Saunders in Chicago asked for time off even before starting work.

    When he showed up an hour late for work the first day, she fired him. For the next three days, the spurned intern barraged managers with e-mail messages and phone calls, asking for a second chance.


It's certainly true that in some cases that are unrealistic expectations, but let's sum up this article:

    -Showing up on time.
    -Writing competently.
    -Answering the phone politely.
    -Keeping appointments.
    -Responding to requests for information and documents in a timely manner.
    -Acting decent in front of others.
    -Managing your commitments.
    -Keeping your personal problems off your desk.
    -Being straight about your abilities.


What portal into an alternate dimension did we step through where these are considered "unrealistic expectations" for a 20-year-old who made it into college? These aren't "expectations", they're basic skills required for life. How do these kids survive to age 18, how can they be that sheltered? I started travelling on my own at 15, and I was fine, because I wasn't raised an idiot. People have ruled empires at less than college age, led mighty armies to victory, and most college students, it seems, can't balance their checkbook.

Seriously, I'm completely horrified every time I encounter this.
 
Same thing happened at my uni in the British Columbia Interior.  A residential area with apartments and student housing is on the opposite side of a four lane major artery road from the campus.  The path from the residential area comes to the road less than 50 meters from a perfectly good controlled cross walk, yet many insisted on jay-walking across this near-freeway (posted limit 60 km/h, actual limit 80 km/h) because jay-walking meant getting to class a full 1 - 2 minutes sooner.

You don't need brains to get into uni, just grades.  ::)
 
An interesting look at "higher education". The disconnect between what is being taught as the practical applications (where the rubber meets the road) are instructive, and rather sad at the same time. The fact these people cannot see the disconnect between their beliefs and the real world is instructive to would be educational reformers and potential students.

National Review Online - http://article.nationalreview.com/

Thinking that Makes the World Worse
Reunited and it feels to bad.

By Carrie Lukas

Americans are used to hearing how academia is out of touch with the real world. Stories from college campuses even periodically make front-page news. Conservative speakers are heckled on campus. Harvard president Larry Summers speculates about innate gender differences—something most Americans consider common sense—and is censured and essentially forced out by the faculty. Yale University enrolls a former Taliban official. Colorado University professor Ward Churchill compares victims of the September 11th attacks to Nazis.

These are some public examples of campus radicalism in action. Yet the big embarrassing stories aren’t the only reason we should be concerned about universities. The real crisis is the grinding, daily bias on college campuses that’s so bland it’s easy to ignore.

I was reminded of this insidiousness when I returned to Harvard for the five-year reunion of my graduation from the Kennedy School of Government. I looked forward to catching up with friends, but the weekend was classic KSG. In addition to the usual cash-bar receptions and class dinner, the school offered panel discussions with names like “The UN’s Footsoldiers,” “Mobilizing Adaptive Work,” and “What We Can Learn From Non-Profits.”

Now that’s the self-important, government-celebrating, liberal elitism that I remember! These titles brought back memories of countless lectures celebrating the nobility of “public service.” The message was always the same: While businesspeople are fueled by an ugly desire for dollars, government officials are servants of the people. Self-sacrificing and motivated by the public good, those toiling in agencies and public offices deserve a special kind of reverence.

It’s perhaps understandable for a school of public policy to celebrate government officials, many of whom sincerely want to make the world a better place. Yet the sanctimonious reverence surrounding “public service” conceals a darker message: “Only we are fit to comment on or craft the country’s future—people concerned with pedestrian concerns like business or family should leave governance to us.

An amusing aspect of attending a school of government was witnessing the regular triumph of bad management. The cash bar at the welcoming reception featured a line that unnecessarily twisted into the next room. In Soviet fashion, guests first paid for a drink ticket, moved two feet, handed over the ticket, and repeated their orders to a bartender. A make-work program, no doubt.

No reunion would be complete without fundraising. During the dinner, for example, class officers encouraged us to donate to a scholarship program. Two current recipients took to the podium to thank the class and describe why they needed the support.

One student, an immigrant from Africa named Daniel, had been putting himself through school by renting out an apartment in Chicago. That plan collapsed when the renter stopped paying. Daniel went to court—four times—for an evection order but was shocked at the difficulty of removing the squatter. All the laws, he said, favored the tenant over the property owner. So far he’s out more than $20,000 in foregone rent, with thousands more for legal bills and plane tickets from Boston to Chicago. Yet the tenant still was living in his home, rent-free, with no penalty. Daniel told me he’s given up hope of recouping the lost income and now is focused simply on reclaiming his stolen property. If it weren’t for this scholarship, he would have had to drop out of school.

Daniel shouldn’t have had to thank the Harvard alum for his scholarship. It is the thoughtless liberalism inculcated at such “schools of government” that have created the very laws that made him financially needy in the first place. At dinner, my fellow graduates applauded Daniel and shook their heads in sympathy at his desperate situation. But if we were back in school (likely in a class named something like “Creating Equality Through Access to Affordable Housing”) they would readily have been cheerleaders for laws that favor the poor tenant—unable to afford the market rent—over the greedy property owner.

No one dug further into the true lessons of Daniel’s story or considered what it says about the liberal policies that universities like Harvard promote. The honored alum instead toasted their noble sacrifice to “public service,” patting themselves on the back for helping a victim that they helped create. A more fitting metaphor for government today I can’t imagine.

—Carrie Lukas is the author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex and Feminism and the vice president for policy and economics at the Independent Women’s Forum.

 
Back
Top