America’s Educational Superpower Is Fading
Analysis by Adrian Wooldridge | Bloomberg
April 18, 2023
The
United States has been a leader in higher education since the
Massachusetts legislature founded Harvard College in 1636, six years
after the Puritans landed and established the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
The Americans built the world’s first mass university system with the
creation of land-grant universities via the Morrill Acts of 1862 and
1890. They mixed the world’s two most successful models of higher
education — the German research university and the Oxbridge residential
college — into a uniquely powerful synthesis in the 1890s. The 20th
century has seen the US invent the high-tech research park, the
multiversity, the commuter college and, cynics might add, the university
as hedge fund.
In
many respects the US remains the global pacemaker today. American
universities occupy 19 of the top 30 slots in the 2023 Times Higher
Education Supplements’ ranking of the world’s universities. The US has
by far the largest concentration of Nobel Prize winners. Nine of the top
ten richest universities are in the US (the odd man out is the King
Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia). Harvard
University’s top ranking on that list, with an endowment of more than
$50 billion, didn’t prevent Kenneth Griffin, the founder and CEO of
Citadel (and a voluble critic of academic leftism), from writing a check
for $300 million.
Yet
behind this glittering façade of Nobel Prizes and gargantuan gifts, the
US university system is beginning to molder. The problem is not just a
few glitches here and there. That is to be expected in a giant system.
It is that vital elements in a healthy academic system are failing at
the same time. Prices continue to rise: A year at Cornell now costs
nearly $90,000. Administrative bloat is rampant: Yale University now has
the equivalent of one administrator for every undergraduate student.
Federal student debt has reached $1.6 trillion, 60% more than credit
card debt.
Enrollment
has fallen by 1.4 million since the pandemic began, with no end in
sight with the waning of the pandemic. A majority of Americans now
consider a college degree a questionable investment.
Life
within many universities no longer resembles the bucolic ideal that
those of us of a certain age remember. A tiny tenured elite sits on top
of a mass of toiling temporary workers who move from one short-term
assignment and frequently end up unemployed — the world’s most highly
educated lumpenproletariat. The biggest US strike last year was
conducted by 48,000 workers at the University of California, the state’s
third largest employer. The representation of these workers by the
United Auto Workers union is symbolic as well as noteworthy: For
America’s university sector increasingly looks like the country’s car
industry in the 1970s, just before it was taken apart by the Japanese —
hampered by a giant bureaucracy, contemptuous of many of its workers,
and congenitally inward-looking.
How
can we prevent one of America’s most successful industries going the
way of the once-dominant General Motors? Answers to this question tend
to fall into two categories — the complacent and the disruptive. The
complacent argue that we need more generous public subsidies. President
Joe Biden wants the federal government to forgive billions of dollars in
student debt in a one-off bonanza while also tweaking the rules for
student financing to make the system more generous. But quite apart from
the likelihood that this proposal will not survive a review by
America’s conservative Supreme Court, it does nothing to address — and
will probably exacerbate — the underlying problem of cost inflation.
The
disruptive argue that America needs to reinvent higher education in the
light of new technology. The late Clayton Christensen, of Harvard
Business School and The Innovator’s Dilemma,” co-wrote another
intriguing book, The Innovator’s University, about how the university
was the latest example of an industry that was about to be
revolutionized by a disruptive technology that could shrink price and
revolutionize access. Yet the revolution has still not come. Education
is a quintessentially human process that ideally centers on the same
thing as it did in Socrates’ day — the spark of inspiration leaping from
one mind to another. Technology can help but it can never replace the
human touch.
The
best way to reform US higher education is to take the four principles
that have shaped the university sector from the very beginning and bring
them back into a healthy balance. The US has taken the first two
principles — democratization and marketization — too far. They need to
be reined in. It has faltered in its support for the third and fourth
principles — meritocracy and freedom of speech. It needs to redouble its
support for the third and demonstrate that the fourth is
non-negotiable.
The
democratic principle has triumphed: More Americans than ever before
have been to university. But this triumph has exacted a heavy cost not
only in college debt but in the neglect of non-college paths to success.
In Germany, practical-minded children have a clear road to success
through technical colleges and apprenticeships. In America, they are
increasingly left with nowhere to go. Thirty-nine million Americans drop
out of college without finishing their degree, leaving them in the
worst of both worlds — student debt without a sheepskin — and suggesting
that college-for-all is an inherently foolish idea.
Defenders
of the current university-focused system point out that US universities
contain all manner of vocational schools under their capacious roof.
But is it sensible to put vocational education in a realm where many
practical-minded students fear to tread and where professors are chosen
for their publication record rather than their teaching ability?
Democratization may have been an excuse for bundling up lots of
different educational functions that might be better off delivered
through diverse and dedicated institutions, as in Germany. It’s time at
least to experiment with a new model.
The
traditional counterpoise to democratization was marketization, which
was supposed to help pay the bills while keeping the Ivy Towers rooted
in the ground. Marketization has certainly paid big dividends: The US
model of linking the universities to local tech industries, pioneered by
Stanford, is envied and imitated across the world. But it has also
generated waste — universities compete to build expensive sports
complexes or hire star professors (who are always on sabbatical) in
order to attract customers and boost their rankings. US universities
have also imported some of the worst qualities of mature companies:
exorbitant CEO pay, a bloated middle-management, a habit of treating
non-tenured faculty as precarious workers rather than candidates for
membership of a learned society, and, to the chagrin of conservatives
who naively imagined that marketization might tame the tenured radicals
who dominate the faculties, all the expensive paraphernalia of the woke
corporation. The number of administrators has grown with a speed that
would astonish even GM’s middle-managers of the 1970s: Stanford’s army
of managerial and professional staff leapt from 8,984 in 2019 to 11,336
in 2021.
Universities
need to borrow some of the tougher techniques from the private sector
as well as the softer ones like increasing president’s pay: How about
“downsizing” some of those middle managers, “re-engineering” some of
those administrative processes, and focusing on “core competences” like
teaching? They also need to prevent the new administrative staff from
taking over functions that should be reserved for academics, most
importantly selecting students and staff and defining the ethos of the
institution.
The
combination of democracy and marketization is weakening a third
defining principle of a successful university — meritocracy. Elite
universities continue to favor the offspring of donors (actual or
prospective) by providing preferential admissions for the children of
alumni or practitioners of plutocratic sports such as fencing or
lacrosse. At the same time, they favor certain ethnic groups through
policies of “diversity, equity and inclusion.” Worryingly, a growing
number of universities are making SAT tests, which were introduced in
the 1930s in the name of meritocracy, optional while keeping legacy
preferences intact.
SAT
tests are a valuable way of discovering hidden talent in poorer
children from non-academic backgrounds. True, elite parents can improve
their children’s SAT scores through coaching. But you can address this
problem by providing coaching for everyone or by using SAT tests to
compare people from similar economic backgrounds. Giving more emphasis
to more subjective measures such as academic grades, extracurricular
activities and teachers’ reports invariably tilts the selection process
in favor of richer students and favored ethnic or social groups. Jacques
Steinberg’s classic study, The Gatekeepers: Inside the Admissions
Process of a Premier College, paints a stomach-turning picture of
admissions officers making life-changing decisions on the basis of raw
prejudice and social snobbery. Without the back-up of universally
administered objective tests. it will be harder to hold admissions
officers to account for decisions which affect the spending of public
money as well as the shaping of the future elite’s character.
The
most dangerous threat of all is to the principle of free speech. There
is an uncomfortable number of examples of students shouting down invited
speakers — most recently, law school students at Stanford University
shouted down a Trump-appointed federal judge, Stuart Kyle Duncan, who
had been invited to speak by the school’s Federalist Society chapter.
The Foundation of Individual Rights and _expression_ (FIRE) calculates
that there were 877 attempts from 2014 to 2022 to punish scholars for
the _expression_ of ideas that are protected by the First Amendment.
The
threat to freedom of speech goes deeper than overt bullying. In On
Liberty, John Stuart Mill argued that freedom of speech can only
flourish if you have a diversity of opinion. But diversity of opinion is
being squeezed out in US universities. Left-of-center academics vastly
outnumber their right-of-center colleagues, and the left is shifting
ever more to the left. In one recent survey, most conservative academics
told pollsters that they encounter a “hostile environment” for their
beliefs while about half of left-wing and centrist academics admit that
they would discriminate against Trump supporters or conservatives. The
DEI bureaucracy is by its own lights wedded to a highly questionable
notion of equality — equality of results (“equity”) rather than equality
of opportunity— yet some 20% of academic jobs require candidates to
submit DEI statements. In 2018, the University of California, Berkeley,
weeded down a list of 894 applicants for five jobs in the life sciences
to a short-list on the basis of gender and racial diversity statements
alone, in a worrying example of academics ceding the selection process
to the ascendant managerial class. Universities must not only stand firm
against attempts to shout down speakers but also make sure that they
don’t become echo chambers in which unconventional views (which these
days usually means conservative or libertarian views but also means
gender-critical feminism) are not given an airing at all.
Though
a rebalancing of the fundamental principles of higher education might
sound like an unrealistic demand, signs of progress are popping up on
all fronts. Some powerful voices are questioning higher ed’s monopoly
over “good jobs.” Opportunity@Work, a non-profit founded by former
McKinsey consultant and Obama administration official Byron Auguste,
argues that America’s obsession with degree certificates is creating “a
paper ceiling” for people who have acquired skills by other routes, a
ceiling that is particularly damaging to members of ethnic minorities.
Some leading high-tech companies have dropped the degree requirements
for some positions, as has the state of Maryland. University newspapers
such as the Yale Daily News are full of outraged stories about the sheer
number of academic bureaucrats.
Groups
of Asian-Americans, such as those who brought a Supreme Court case
against Harvard University’s affirmative action program, are rallying
behind meritocracy in general, and the SAT and other objective tests in
particular, on the grounds that more subjective systems of assessment
are excuses for anti-Asian prejudice.
The
best news may be the (albeit belated) rallying behind freedom of
speech. The dean of Stanford Law School, Jenny Martinez, has produced a
robust defense of the principle of free speech and insisted that all
students should henceforth be obliged to attend a training session on
free speech and the norms of the legal profession. A new faculty-led
organization at Harvard has vowed to defend academic freedom and civil
discourse. (Harvard ranks 170th out of 203 universities in FIRE’s free
speech rankings.) Cornell University has decided to make free _expression_
— its significance, history and challenges — its featured theme for
discussion in the next academic year. “It is critical to our mission as a
university to think deeply about freedom of _expression_ and the
challenges that result from assaults on it, which today come from both
ends of the political spectrum,” says its president, Martha Pollack.
A
long period of pell-mell growth has pulled the higher education sector
badly out of shape. Let’s hope the coming years of retrenchment will
allow universities to rein back some of their excessive enthusiasms (for
adding numbers and unleashing market forces) while at the same time
reinforcing their commitment to the foundational liberal principles of
meritocracy and freedom-of-speech. Yale’s Latin motto is “lux et
veritas.” At a time when the world is confronted with dark clouds of
misinformation from both foreign autocracies and click-mad social media
platforms, American universities need to demonstrate beyond doubt that
they are on the side of light and truth.
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This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Adrian
Wooldridge is the global business columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. A
former writer at the Economist, he is author, most recently, of “The
Aristocracy of Talent: How Meritocracy Made the Modern World.”
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion