College
students from Baylor to Oberlin are right: they’re being exploited and
oppressed. They’re just aiming their fire at the wrong part of the system.
The recently
passed academic year teemed with scandals at American colleges and
universities. Most recently, Baylor
University fired president Ken Starr and head football coach Art Briles
over (repeat)
allegations they covered up athletes’ sexual assaults. English majors at Yale
University are demanding that they no longer have to read white, male authors
in a required two-semester survey of—get this—British poetry. Apparently
being white is a strike against William Shakespeare.
A wave of
physically aggressive mob action cloaked in social justice rhetoric washed over the nation’s “top” colleges and
universities, most prominently at the University of Missouri but also
hitting schools that have been at the top of “best colleges” lists for decades:
Yale, Oberlin, Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, University of
Michigan, Tufts, Wesleyan, and dozens more.
Students at “top” universities such as Yale,
Princeton,
and Stanford
redoubled demands that colleges divest from companies a handful of students
opposed for the crime of being privately owned institutions. Students at
Stanford University rejected a push to learn basic Western history as part of
their core curriculum.
To everyone who
has been paying attention to higher education over the past half-century, this
all isn’t really a surprise. These events proclaim that higher education has
largely devolved into a scam that bilks
taxpayers out of $157 billion a year, employers out of prepared employees,
and the country out of capable citizens. The students are right: they’re being
exploited and oppressed. They’re just aiming their fire at the wrong system.
If students and
taxpayers are the victims, who are the victimizers? Follow the money. Who is
making out like bandits from a higher education system that everyone knows (and
data shows) financially, culturally, and intellectually handicaps young
citizens rather than the opposite? Who goes home at night and sleeps well while
young people are intellectually, morally, and physically raped under their
watch? It’s the bureaucrats, of course.
Baylor
University Is a Prime Example
College sports
is a prime example of higher education’s twisted priorities. There is no reason
for semi-pro sports to be a part of higher education. That isn’t to say
that athletics is not important in the work of character formation that every
education institution ought to pursue, but a comment about perspective. Sports as
a part-time endeavor is perfectly complementary to the work of a student.
Sports can work in symbiosis with academics, teaching perseverance in the face
of difficulty, grace in failure, and more practically offering benefits such as
teaching time-management and increasing cognitive function. For reasons such as
these, research suggests athletics
increase academic achievement in K-12 schooling.
There’s a point
at which sports displace academics, however, and that kind of perversion of a
college’s academic mission leads to other kinds of corruption. Thus the
frequent athletic scandals at Big Ten colleges and the like. Athletes at this
level typically treat academics as a hobby (given grueling training regimens
sometimes they have no choice), and that’s the problem.
At the level of
a Division I Big 12 school like Baylor, what we have are colleges acting essentially
as farm teams for pro sports. Now, they want to do this because it generates a
pile of money for them, for local governments, for sports media, and so on. But
sports at this level not only have almost nothing to do with a college’s
academic mission, they in fact pervert that mission.
Very little of
that money goes to fulfill a college’s academic and civic missions—in fact, sports
typically drain money from academics. Their take pads and justifies massive
salaries all throughout bureaucracies ranging from those inside the colleges
themselves to those inside local governments to those inside accreditation
institutions, in many if not most cases for people who contribute not one iota
to a college’s academic mission. Bully for them, but not so much for
students—not even the athletes.
Structured in
this fashion, college becomes a giant scam that exploits players who (besides
baseball, generally speaking) have no other options but college for developing
their athletic skills in an eventual bid for the majors. They may not be at all
interested in college as college, but they have to go because that’s the only
way of achieving a sports career.
Many Colleges
Are Really Diploma Mills
Fortunately,
colleges make enough money off “student” athletes to pay “tutors” and
“professors” who assign and complete enough make-work assignments to justify a
sham diploma, as we saw revealed in the North Carolina-Chapel Hill athletic scandal
last year. There, over 18 years more than
3,000 athletes pretended to attend college while UNC paid people to churn
out falsified papers and grades for them.
A subsequent
report found the university responded to the scandal by doubling down on
admitting athletes whose high-school academic records showed they would not be
able to keep up. This atmosphere is not at all unique to Baylor or UNC,
according to “Cheated:
The UNC Scandal, the Education of Athletes, and the Future of Big-Time College
Sports,” published in 2015. As UNC’s Mary Willingham writes in “Cheated,”
these programs exploit both non-athletes and the athletes themselves:
Students…told
her that they had never had to write anything before, and students could barely
read being taken out of a Basic Writing class and placed instead into one of
the classes known to yield easy A grades…. ‘Recruits are told that they will
receive “world-class” educations and that these educations, for all their
world-classness, will be easily acquired.’ …Many young men let basic education
slide so they can try to attract the attention of college coaches, and then let
college education slide while they try to attract the attention of pro scouts,
but only a fraction of one percent of them will ever sign a professional sports
contract. They don’t think about the costs of ignoring school when they see
college stars getting drafted and signing multi-million dollar deals.
This atmosphere
and these incentives effectively makes “academic” departments props to sell
parents and the public on the fiction that students are receiving a
“world-class” education on this exciting campus. Nobody complains until the
students graduate from these diploma mills and can hardly add using their
fingers. By then, the money is gone.
Why would, as
the Baylor report alleges, a college president and local police cover for
rather than expel and arrest, respectively, football players who have committed
sexual assault? Publicity-wise, there may be a short-term negative effect for
admitting the existence of sexual assault on campus, but a long-term positive
effect as students and the public see and respect that a college will not
tolerate egregious behavior. In whose interest is it to see young women raped
and their rapists go unpunished? The people who make piles of money and
exciting careers from these rapists’ athletic performances, that’s who.
From Physical to
Intellectual Exploitation
Runaway sports
structures are only one way in which colleges exploit students. As the Baylor
and UNC cases show, higher education corruption is both moral and intellectual,
and the two have a symbiotic relationship. Two weeks ago, the New Yorker
published an
eye-opening account of what passes for student life at Oberlin College,
which is rated
23rd in the nation on the dominant (yet idiotic) U.S. News and World
Report rankings.
These are the
kids who complained that cafeteria sushi and banh mi were racially offensive
because the foods weren’t authentic enough, and this the college where a professor
can go on a crazy
conspiracy-theorist anti-Semitic rant on Facebook and get
a pass because she’s black. Oh, yeah, guys: World-class material right
here. For comedy. Or tragedy, because it’s really only comedic until you
realize these are young people’s lives being mangled by an ideology that only
harms their ability to participate in the world as it is, rather than as they
have been taught to want it to be.
It’s
really only comedic until you realize these are young people’s lives being
mangled by an ideology that only harms their ability to participate in the
world as it is.
This is
heart-rending stuff. Writer Nathan Heller sits down with “Afro-Latinx” student
Megan Bautista, who notes, “A lot of people here are the first in their
families, or in the position where they really have to be the breadwinners as
soon as they graduate.” Yet their campus studies and pursuits do not seem
structured to tangibly empower such students through steering them through
actual accomplishments that will result in a life of service to family and
country. “They didn’t have the luxury of hours for unpaid activism,” Heller
writes. Yet they did it anyway, frequently trekking 40 minutes to Cleveland to
protest after a police officer shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice.
They couldn’t do
that and keep up with their studies. But rather than decide which of the two
was a priority and realize, like adults must, that life offers tradeoffs,
Bautista and her friends petitioned the school to inflate their grades because
of their activism. Another student, Zakiya Acey, complains to Heller that he
“can’t produce the work that they want me to do” because he’s “dealing with
having been arrested on campus.” Some, but not all, professors will let him
give his exam answers orally, but others oppress him by, presumably, asking him
to take written exams or turn in papers.
Note that when
“education” structured this way happens at UNC it ends up with a notably
impoverished education being given to young people who typically can least
afford to learn little. Expressing one’s work in “portfolios” or oral exams is
typically less rigorous than doing so in lengthy essays and research papers.
Taxpayer-Sponsored,
Unemployable Rabble-Rousers
What, exactly,
are such Oberlin students being taught to do or know that will improve their
lives and the life of their communities? “Intersectionality” and post-Marxism
mind games may be engrossing, but so far in real life their only major
consequences have been social strife. Note these two haunting passages:
[Professor
Wendy] Kozol noticed something alarming: the students had started seating
themselves by race. Those of color had difficulty with anything that white
students had to say; they didn’t want to hear it anymore. Kozol took over the
class for the spring, and, she told me, ‘it played out through identity
politics.’ The class was supposed to be a research workshop. But students went
cold when they had to engage with anyone outside their community.
…‘We’re asking to be reflected in our education,” [student Jasmine] Adams cuts in. ‘I literally am so tired of learning about Marx, when he did not include race in his discussion of the market!’ She shrugs incredulously. ‘As a person who plans on returning to my community, I don’t want to assimilate into middle-class values. I’m going home, back to the ’hood of Chicago, to be exactly who I was before I came to Oberlin.’
…‘We’re asking to be reflected in our education,” [student Jasmine] Adams cuts in. ‘I literally am so tired of learning about Marx, when he did not include race in his discussion of the market!’ She shrugs incredulously. ‘As a person who plans on returning to my community, I don’t want to assimilate into middle-class values. I’m going home, back to the ’hood of Chicago, to be exactly who I was before I came to Oberlin.’
If this young
lady is going home to be exactly the person she was before Oberlin, why has she
come to Oberlin? Why are donors and taxpayers supporting her and her fellow
students? Certainly not for the service-minded citizens Oberlin and the other
“top-tier” colleges like it are producing. These young people are a bunch of
uninformed rabble-rousers, not young adults capable of or even interested in
contributing to their neighborhoods as parents, employees, Little League
volunteers, and so on. Their idea of public service is rhetorically attacking
police officers and demanding wealth redistribution, not teaching poor kids to
read so they can one day grow up and go to Oberlin. Yet which of these is more
tangibly beneficial to addressing racial inequality?
Do you want
people like this to have any power over you? Or even as neighbors? Not really.
Who knows if one day you might come home and find them protesting on your porch
because you cut the grass, and that disturbs the natural ecosystem, which is
(obviously) racist, because people of color do not have equal access to
untainted ecosystems. And of course sexist, because the Earth is
female-spirited. Or something. I can’t even make this stuff up, it’s so crazy.
Stop Subsidizing
Things That Are Destroying America
Deconstructionist
grievance-mongers have hijacked the liberal arts to provide themselves comfy
salaries and low workloads while sucking the lifeblood of the nation’s young.
If they actually cared about young people and our country, professors would
harness the power of the true liberal arts to teach young people how to
transcend their pain. Great works of literature and the great ideas humans have
wrestled with across centuries and civilizations bring us out of our petty
tribal provincialism; they transcend narrow categories like race and class.
They give us grounds for talking and living with each other despite our
differences.
They’ve
been taught this lazy intellectual entitlement by their parents and teachers,
who should know better.
But these
students don’t want to be brought up and out. They want to be rewarded for
merely existing, for doing nothing. They’ve been taught this lazy intellectual
entitlement by their parents and teachers, who should know better.
These students
are being victimized by their clearly bankrupt ideology and the mentors who
have preached it to them all their lives, but they want to be victimized
because in their minds that elevates their position. In our upside-down world,
we become superior by being inferior.
Oberlin and its
ilk are welcome to use private donations to colonize the minds of their
students and render them unfit for life. But it’s time for taxes to stop
subsidizing the physical, moral, and mental exploitation of young people
through a system whose chief effects are providing sinecures for lazy cowards
and actively destroying our ability to live together as Americans. Oh, and saddling the latest generation of graduates with an average
of approximately $35,000 in college loans while nearly half of them are
working jobs that don’t require a college degree, despite promising them
college is a one-way ticket out of having to work your way up
a career ladder.
As
Milton Friedman says, if you want higher education, you should pay for it
yourself (or with help from private donors or
investors, who have personal stakes in what their money produces). That’s
the only way to align colleges’ financial incentives with students’ needs for
substantive learning. Otherwise, higher education is just the old and powerful
exploiting the young and weak. Skin in the game is power to influence its
outcome.