Harvard has just witnessed a
bruising struggle over educational goals. The president wanted change but
offered little vision, and lost his job in the ensuing chaotic mismanagement.
The confusion on our campus made headlines, but the uncertainty about
educational purpose can be found at most colleges.
Serious donors to universities cannot be blamed for wondering
if their money is actually doing much to prepare young minds for the future. Nor
is anyone who is a stakeholder in the system–including students, parents,
donors, faculty and employers of graduates–gaining anything from the tired
debate over whether colleges should prepare students for the real world with
preprofessional courses or for a life of the mind through liberal studies. A
more fundamental problem is that even the best schools are unwilling to judge
what it actually means to be educated. In the past five years, no one at
Harvard–president, dean or faculty committee–has coherently argued that some
subjects are more worth knowing than others. Universities need leaders who can
explain what is important to a good education and what is not.
Great presidents build consensus around educational ideals. We
had those ideals in the post-World War II era, when American society felt it had
almost lost civilization itself. In 1945, the classic Harvard report
General Education in a Free
Society emerged from the fear that civilization
would again be threatened if we did not teach both facts and values to a newly
diverse student body. We have broadened our offerings greatly since then,
providing a wide variety of choices to an increasingly diverse student body. But
Harvard now describes "breadth" and "opportunity" as goals in themselves. Proud
statements about students’ freedom of choice mask a void when it comes to
promising that they will truly learn something.
What we are seeing today is university administrations catering
to the demands of students-as-customers on the one hand, and, on the other hand,
demands of professors to teach what they wish. The result is a curriculum that
looks like a restaurant menu. A degree certifies the completion of so many
courses with at least so many in a major, but offers no assurances about shared
knowledge or values. A liberal education at Harvard today means a broad general
education as opposed to one aimed at developing professional skills; in short,
an education defined more by what it is not than by what it is. If we bother to
ask students some pointed questions about why they want to take, for example,
accounting, they may respond with: "We might as well become prepared for a
career, because we do not see another rationale for our education."
Basic Training Suppose the best universities were to make it clear that
certain areas of study are crucial to a good education. One way to do this would
be to appoint a broadly based faculty committee to design a curriculum
containing exactly 10 general education courses, of which a student needed any
five to graduate. Western intellectual history might be one. The evolution of
life might be another. Gender theory or number theory could be included, but
probably would not make the cut if they had to compete for places among the top
10. Less universal subjects would be left as electives. They could even be
courses for majors, as long as the students also completed the five required
areas of study.
The proposal would force tenured faculty to view education as a
zero-sum game in which they would have to recognize certain books, theories and
ideas as having priority. As it stands, students can assemble a superb
educational program from the academic cornucopia, particularly if the student
has educated parents willing to make value judgments about what to study.
Although individual professors may be good advisors, they have not collectively
agreed on what an education should provide.
Harvard recently spent three years reviewing its curriculum only to suggest
in its final report that students should be free agents. That conclusion
abrogates educational responsibility. Left to their own devices, students tend
to avoid the courses that would teach them the most. With many tenured
professors only too happy to exercise their own freedom to do as they please,
the result is an easy compromise between faculty and students in the name of
freedom for both.
Harry R. Lewis, a Harvard professor and former dean of Harvard
College, is the author of Excellence
Without a Soul: How a Great University Forgot Education. |  |
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