The Shame of Higher Education
By Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Many of our nation's colleges and universities have become cesspools
of indoctrination, intolerance, academic dishonesty and the new racism.
In a March 1991 speech, Yale President Benno Schmidt warned, "The
most serious problems of freedom of expression in our society today exist
on our campuses.. . . The assumption seems to be that the purpose of education
is to induce correct opinion rather than to search for wisdom and to liberate
the mind."
Writing in the fall 2006 issue of Academic Questions, Luann Wright,
in her article titled "Pernicious Politicization in Academe,"
documents academic dishonesty and indoctrination all too common today.
Here are some of her findings:
-- An ethnic studies professor, at Cal State Northridge and Pasadena
City College, teaches that "the role of students and teachers in
ethnic studies is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable."
-- UC Santa Barbara's School of Education e-mailed its faculty asking
them to consider classroom options concerning the Iraq War, suggesting
they excuse students from class to attend anti-war events and give them
extra credit to write about it.
-- An English professor at Montclair State University in New Jersey
tells his students, "Conservatism champions racism, exploitation
and imperialist war."
Other instances of academic dishonesty include professors having their
students write letters to state representatives protesting budget cuts.
Students enrolled in cell biology, math and art classes must sit through
lectures listening to professorial rants about unrelated topics such
as globalism, U.S. exploitation of the Middle East and President Bush.
Wright is also the founder of NoIndoctrination.org, a website containing
hundreds of reports of similar academic bias and dishonesty.
Anne D. Neal, president of The American Council of Trustees and Alumni,
wrote a companion article titled "Advocacy in the College Classroom."
She says that campuses across the nation have cultivated an atmosphere
that permits the disinviting of politically incorrect speakers; politicized
instruction; reprisals against or intimidation of students who speak their
mind; political discrimination in college hiring and retention; and campus
speech codes.
On most college campuses, there's the worship of diversity. The universities
of Harvard, Texas A&M, UC Berkeley, Virginia and many others boast
of officers, deans and vice presidents of diversity. Many academics make
the mindless argument, with absolutely no evidence to back it up, that
racial representation is necessary for academic excellence. For them,
getting the right racial mix requires racial discrimination.
Diversity wasn't the buzzword back in the 1970s, '80s and '90s. Diversity
is the response by universities, as well as corporations, to various court
decisions holding racial quotas, goals and timetables unconstitutional.
Offices of diversity and inclusion are simply substitutes for yesterday's
offices of equity or affirmative action. It's simply a matter of old wine
in new bottles, but it's racism just the same.
In an open letter titled "To the President of My University,"
Carl Cohen, professor of philosophy at the University of Michigan, summarizes,
"Diversity is a good thing -- but the claim that the need for diversity
is so compelling that it overrides the constitutional guarantee of civic
equality is one we swallow only because, by holding our nose and gulping
it down, we can go on doing what our feeling of guilt demands."
Until parents, donors and taxpayers shed their unwillingness to investigate
what's sold to them as higher education, what we see today will continue
and get worse. Just as important is the recognition of the fact that boards
of trustees at our colleges and universities bear the ultimate responsibility,
and it is they who've been grossly derelict in their duty.
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John
M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More
Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
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