In classics, two major changes were made. The “classics” track, which required an intermediate proficiency in Greek or Latin to enter the concentration, was eliminated, as was the requirement for students to take Greek or Latin. Students still are encouraged to take either language if it is relevant to their interests in the department. The breadth of offerings remains the same, said Josh Billings, director of undergraduate studies and professor of classics. The changes ultimately give students more opportunities to major in classics. —”Curriculum Changed Add Flexibility, Race, and Identity Track,” Princeton Alumni Weekly
A New Dark Age?
The one thing that most people with undergraduate degrees think they know is that the Middle Ages was a “dark ages.” That story is, at best, only partially true. The Middle Ages describes a period of about 1,000 years during which some remarkable intellectual and academic achievements were made. My students can testify, however, that, for some years, I have been making jokes about a coming dark age. There is some evidence that it may now be upon us.
Ten years ago a report was published that documented the decline in the number of hours “college students” (the report does not distinguish between undergraduate and graduate students) spend studying since 1961. A decade ago, scholars were lamenting the decline in “critical thinking skills” and a “lack of rigor” in university programs. If you ask professors, they will tell you that trend has continued. A report from 2017, says, “Employers complain that many graduates they hire are deficient in basic skills such as writing, problem solving and critical thinking that college leaders and their faculties consistently rank among the most important goals of an undergraduate education.” This report notes a sharp difference between the way college seniors perceive their ability and the way they score on tests:
Again, those who teach undergraduates, graduate students, and those who employ them will tell you that their experience and anecdotal evidence confirms this discrepancy. The 2017 suggests that “better feedback” will help to “restore appropriate standards” but all the incentives are pushing in the opposite direction. The baby boom is long over. Universities are over-built and heavily dependent upon mom and dad to write hefty tuition checks. Students have become clients who are being told that they are the best and the brightest, whose GPA reflects that narrative, and who are being asked to learn less every year.
One of the persistent myths of American education is that there are still elite schools where standards remain, where the best and the brightest really are still doing the hard work of gaining an excellent undergraduate education and that this is partly out of a sense of obligation (noblesse oblige), and partly out of tradition. The “Ivy League” schools are supposed to be holding the line by maintaining standards.
To be sure, there are still schools where standards are upheld. I think of schools like Hillsdale College, Grove City College, and St John’s College. My experience is that students coming from these schools and others like them, are upholding standards but as a teacher of graduate students, who sees the results of the declining rigor in undergraduate programs, they are relatively few. The trend in undergraduate education is not toward higher standards. The establishment of the Department of Education in 1980, with its layers of educational bureaucracy, has not helped the cause of education. It has created a huge layer of bureaucracy in colleges and universities, which is tasked with quantifying educational processes and outcomes. Bureaucrats cannot judge a well-written paragraph or a well-argued essay but they (or their computers) can count and that is what they do.
That Princeton University, one of our nation’s elite schools, is dropping the requirement that classics majors learn Greek and Latin is part of a much bigger story. It illustrates concretely the decline in standards and rate of degree inflation. Monetary inflation (have you been to the store lately?) describes what happens when a unit of currency is devalued. When that happens currency loses its purchasing power. In 1961, the reported starting salary for someone with a bachelor’s degree was about $6,000. In 2015 it was about $50,000. When huge numbers of dollars are pumped into the economy the existing dollars can lose their purchasing power. The same thing happens with grades and degrees. When top marks (in most American schools that is an A) are handed out for poorer performance, that mark loses its value. When a classics degree that formerly required students to learn classical languages no longer does, the degree becomes inflated. It is worth less than the earlier degree.
The effect of lower academic standards, grade inflation, and degree inflation is that the students who emerge from such a system are not as well prepared to think, function, work, and lead as they were.
What Should Parents And Students Do?
Find a school that still has high standards. It has been exceeding difficult during Covid to maintain high standards. School libraries have been closed, students have been dispersed across the globe, and distance education, however tempting, has been found wanting. As we emerge from the pandemic, parents and students should look for schools who are maintaining standards. How can students and parents judge whether a school is maintaining standards? One way is to look at what schools report to their accrediting agencies. Virtually all schools must report to a regional accrediting body. On the West Coast we report to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC). Find out to which regional accrediting agency your school reports and take a look at their report.
An even better measure, however, is actual outcomes. Many schools must collect a senior portfolio and submit them to the regional accrediting agency. Ask to see random samples of student work. What do employers say about the graduates from this school? What do graduate schools say about their graduates? Are they able to get into and finish good graduate programs? As a teacher in a graduate school I have a good sense of which schools are likely to send us well prepared students.
Perhaps most importantly parents and prospective students should ask whether students are being required to learn things of substance or whether a school is following the latest fad. Princeton is announcing to the world what they are doing: granting degrees in classics to students who no longer have to learn the most basic thing about the classic world: the languages. A little more than a century ago, in many undergraduate schools, it was expected that all students would learn Latin. 70 years ago, American public high schools in big cities and in small, rural towns required students to learn Latin. Until 1920, Oxford University required incoming students to know Greek and Latin was required for as a condition of entrance until 1960. The assumption of the Westminster Seminary curriculum in 1929 was that incoming students would know Greek and possibly Hebrew. Today, of course, liberal arts undergraduates are not required to learn Latin and classics departments are often in state of suspense as to whether their funding will be continued next year. In that light, Princeton’s move, however distressing, is part of a longer, larger trend away from what used to be regarded as basic educational standards.
Conclusion
Allowing students to take a classics degree without learning the classical languages is the equivalent of allowing a student to take a degree in engineering without learning math. Would any reputable engineering firm hire an engineer who never learned calculus? We had all better hope not, since we all drive on bridges designed by engineers, who, we trust, have done that hard work. Why should we regard as a legitimate student of the classics a graduate who cannot conjugate amo and who, quite possibly, does not know what it means to decline a noun? Our safety as a society depends upon engineers who can compute and our future as a culture depends upon those who can help us interpret our past.
©R. Scott Clark. All Rights Reserved.
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