Townhall...
Too
Much Higher Education
By Walter E. Williams
9/14/2011
Too
much of anything is just as much a
misallocation of resources as it is too little, and that applies to
higher
education just as it applies to everything else. A recent study from
The Center
for College Affordability and Productivity titled “From Wall Street to
Wal-Mart,” by Richard Vedder, Christopher Denhart, Matthew Denhart,
Christopher
Matgouranis and Jonathan Robe, explains that college education for many
is a
waste of time and money. More than one-third of currently working
college
graduates are in jobs that do not require a degree. An essay by Vedder
that
complements the CCAP study reports that there are “one-third of a
million
waiters and waitresses with college degrees.” The study says Vedder --
distinguished professor of economics at Ohio University, an adjunct
scholar at
the American Enterprise Institute and director of CCAP -- “was startled
a year
ago when the person he hired to cut down a tree had a master’s degree
in
history, the fellow who fixed his furnace was a mathematics graduate,
and, more
recently, a TSA airport inspector (whose job it was to ensure that we
took our
shoes off while going through security) was a recent college graduate.”
The
nation’s college problem is far
deeper than the fact that people simply are overqualified for
particular jobs.
Citing the research of AEI scholar Charles Murray’s book “Real
Education”
(2008), Vedder says: “The number going to college exceeds the number
capable of
mastering higher levels of intellectual inquiry. This leads colleges to
alter
their mission, watering down the intellectual content of what they do.”
In
other words, colleges dumb down courses so that the students they admit
can pass
them. Murray argues that only a modest proportion of our population has
the
cognitive skills, work discipline, drive, maturity and integrity to
master
truly higher education. He says that educated people should be able to
read and
understand classic works, such as John Locke’s “Essay Concerning Human
Understanding” or William Shakespeare’s “King Lear.” These works are
“insightful in many ways,” he says, but a person of average
intelligence
“typically lacks both the motivation and ability to do so.” Mastering
complex
forms of mathematics is challenging but necessary to develop rigorous
thinking
and is critical in some areas of science and engineering.
Richard
Arum and Josipa Roksa, authors
of “Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses” (2011),
report
on their analysis of more than 2,300 undergraduates at 24 institutions.
Forty-five percent of these students demonstrated no significant
improvement in
a range of skills -- including critical thinking, complex reasoning and
writing
-- during their first two years of college. According to an August 2006
issue
brief by the Alliance for Excellent Education, student “lack of
preparation is
also apparent in multiple subject areas; of college freshmen taking
remedial
courses, 35 percent were enrolled in math, 23 percent in writing, and
20
percent in reading.” Declining college admissions standards have
contributed to
the deterioration of the academic quality of our secondary schools.
Colleges
show high schools that they do not have to teach much in order for
youngsters
to be admitted.
According
to Education Next, an August
Harvard University study titled “Globally Challenged: Are U.S. Students
Ready
to Compete?” found that only 32 percent of U.S. students achieved
proficiency
in math, compared with “75 percent of students in Shanghai, 58 percent
in
Korea, and 56 percent in Finland. Countries in which a majority -- or
near
majority -- of students performed at or above the proficiency level in
math
include Switzerland, Japan, Canada, and the Netherlands.” Results from
the 2009
Programme for International Student Assessment international test show
that
U.S. students rank 32nd among industrialized nations in proficiency in
math and
17th in reading.
Much
of American education is in
shambles. Part of a solution is for colleges to refuse to admit
students who
are unprepared to do real college work. That would help to reveal the
shoddy
education provided at the primary and secondary school levels. Here I’m
whistlin’ “Dixie,” because college administrators are more interested
in
numbers of students, which equal more money.
Read
it at Townhall
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