|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Pathologies of Higher Education
| Article
# : |
14558 |
|
|
Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
|
| Issue
Date : |
3 / 1988 |
2,837 Words |
| Author
: |
Paul Piccone Paul Piccone is the editor of Telos, a scholarly journal. |
No one disputes that there is a major crisis in education--especially higher education. The Right and the Left not only share this perception, but provide strikingly complementary analyses of the nature of the crisis. Best-selling books such as Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind and Russell Jacoby's The Intellectuals simply address different aspects of the same general phenomenon. While the Right attributes the current disintegration of standards and dilution of the curriculum to the democratizing reforms successfully imposed by the Left, the Left attributes the more general collapse of a public critical culture to the effective integration of radical intellectuals in bureaucratized and increasingly unaccountable universities. Both theories are correct, but they fail to address the problem underlying the symptoms they so eloquently describe. This problem is tied to broader sociohistorical trends and to institutions in advanced industrial societies. What has happened to universities--and, mutatis mutandis, to the intellectuals who have become increasingly associated with them--must be seen in terms of the general social dynamics of the last half century.
This broader context provides a more critical perspective on the current crisis and a better understanding of its deeper social and political implications. Ultimately, the crisis in education cannot be solved merely by means of appropriate educational reforms and, to the extent it is an expression of a much broader social crisis, its outcome hinges mainly on what will happen in society at large and in those other institutions together with which education contributes to social and cultural reproduction. In fact, the crisis in education is not so much a failure of pedagogy, wrong instruction, or budget constraints. Rather, it results primarily from the failure of
... (1997 of 19670 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|