by Joseph Epstein
When asked what he
thought about the cultural wars, Irving Kristol is said to have replied,
“They’re over,” adding, “We lost.” If Kristol was correct, one of the decisive
battles in that war may have been over the liberal arts in education, which we
also lost.
In a loose
definition, the “liberal arts” denote college study anchored in preponderantly
Western literature, philosophy, and history, with science, mathematics, and
foreign languages playing a substantial, though less central, role; in more
recent times, the social science subjects—psychology, sociology, political
science—have also sometimes been included. The liberal arts have always been
distinguished from more specialized, usually vocational training. For the
ancient Greeks, the liberal arts were the subjects thought necessary for a free
man to study. If he is to remain free, in this view, he must acquire knowledge
of the best thought of the past, which will cultivate in him the intellectual
depth and critical spirit required to live in an informed and reasonable way in
the present.
For many years,
the liberal arts were my second religion. I worshiped their content,
I believed in their significance, I fought for them against the philistines of
our age as Samson fought against the Philistines of his—though in my case, I
kept my hair and brought down no pillars. As currently practiced, however, it
is becoming more and more difficult to defend the liberal arts. Their content
has been drastically changed, their significance is in doubt, and defending
them in the condition in which they linger on scarcely seems worth the
struggle.
The loss of
prestige of the liberal arts is part of the general crisis of higher education
in the United States. The crisis begins in economics. Larger numbers of
Americans start college, but roughly a third never finish—more women finish,
interestingly, than do men. With the economic slump of recent years,
benefactions to colleges are down, as are federal and state grants, thus
forcing tuition costs up, in public as well as in private institutions.
Inflation is greater in the realm of higher education than in any other public
sphere. Complaints about the high cost of education at private colleges—fees of
$50,000 and $55,000 a year are commonly mentioned—are heard everywhere. A great
number of students leave college with enormous student-loan debt, which is
higher than either national credit card or automobile credit debt. Because of
the expense of traditional liberal arts colleges, greater numbers of the young
go to one or another form of commuter college, usually for vocational training.
Although it is
common knowledge that a person with a college degree will earn a great deal
more than a person without one—roughly a million dollars more over a lifetime
is the frequently cited figure—today, students with college degrees are finding
it tough to get decent jobs. People are beginning to wonder if college, at its
currently extravagant price, is worth it. Is higher education, like tech stocks
and real estate, the next big bubble to burst?
A great deal of
evidence for the crisis in American higher education is set out in College:
What It Was, Is, and Should Be. Its author, Andrew Delbanco, the biographer of
Herman Melville, is a staunch defender of liberal arts, as he himself studied
them as an undergraduate at Harvard and as he teaches them currently at
Columbia. The continuing diminution of the liberal arts worries him. Some 18
million people in the United States are now enrolled in one or another kind of
undergraduate institution of higher learning—but fewer than 100,000 are
enrolled in liberal arts colleges.
At the same time,
for that small number of elite liberal arts colleges—Harvard, Yale, Princeton,
Stanford, Duke, the University of Chicago, and a few others—applications
continue to rise, despite higher and higher tuition fees. The ardor to get into
these schools—for economic, social, and snobbish reasons—has brought about an
examination culture, at least among the children of the well-to-do, who from
preschool on are relentlessly trained to take the examinations that will get
them into the better grade schools, high schools, colleges, and, finally,
professional schools. Professor Delbanco is opposed to the economic unfairness
behind these arrangements, believing, rightly, that as a result, “the obstacles
[to getting into the elite colleges] that bright low-income students face today
are more insidious than the frank exclusionary practices that once prevailed.”
Whether students
today, despite all their special tutoring and testing, are any better than
those of earlier generations is far from clear. Trained almost from the cradle
to smash the SATs and any other examination that stands in their way, the
privileged among them may take examinations better, but it is doubtful if their
learning and intellectual understanding are any greater. Usually propelled by
the desires of their parents, they form a meritocracy that, in Delbanco’s view,
as in that of the English sociologist Michael Young whom he quotes, comprises a
dystopia of sorts, peopled by young men and women driven by high, but empty,
ambition. “Are these really the people we want running the world?” Delbanco
asks. Unfortunately, they already are. I am not the only one, surely, to have
noticed that some of the worst people in this country—names on request—are
graduates of the Harvard and Yale law schools.
Attending one of a
limited number of elite colleges continues to yield wide opportunities for
graduates, but fewer and fewer people any longer believe that someone who has
finished college is necessarily all that much smarter than someone who hasn’t.
With standards lowered, hours of study shortened, reports appearing about how
many college graduates can no longer be depended upon to know how to write or
to grasp rudimentary intellectual concepts, having gone to college seems to
have less and less bearing on a person’s intelligence.
Studies cited by
Delbanco in his footnotes claim an increase among college students in cheating,
drinking, and depression. In their book Academically Adrift, Richard Arum and
Josipa Roska argue that the gain in critical thinking and complex reasoning
among the majority of students during college years is very low, if not
minimal. In an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education drawn from their book,
Arum and Roska write:
Parents—although
somewhat disgruntled about increasing costs—want colleges to provide a safe
environment where their children can mature, gain independence, and attain a
credential that will help them be successful as adults. Students in general
seek to enjoy the benefits of a full collegiate experience that is focused as
much on social life as on academic pursuits, while earning high marks in their
courses with relatively little investment of effort. Professors are eager to
find time to concentrate on their scholarship and professional interests.
Administrators have been asked to focus largely on external institutional
rankings and the financial bottom line. Government funding agencies are
primarily interested in the development of new scientific knowledge. . . . No actors in the system are primarily interested in
undergraduates’ academic growth, although many are interested in
student retention and persistence.
What savvy
employers are likely to conclude is that those who graduate from college are
probably more conformist, and therefore likely to be more dependable, than
those who do not. Paul Goodman, one of the now-forgotten gurus of the 1960s,
used to argue that what finishing college really meant is that one was willing
to do anything to succeed in a capitalist society. In getting a college degree,
Goodman held, one was in effect saying, I want in on the game, deal me a hand,
I want desperately to play. Education, meanwhile, didn’t have a lot to do with
it.
Not everywhere in
higher education have standards slipped. One assumes that in engineering and
within the sciences they have been maintained, and in some ways, owing to
computer technology, perhaps improved. Relatively new fields of learning,
computer science chief among them, have not been around long enough to have
lost their way. Medical and legal education are probably not greatly different
than they have traditionally been. Chiefly in the liberal arts subjects do
standards seem most radically to have slipped.
Early in the 19th
century, Sydney Smith, one of the founders of the Edinburgh Review, remarked
that if we had made the same progress in the culinary arts as we have made in
education, we should still be eating soup with our hands. Apart from
eliminating corporal punishment and widening the educational franchise, we
can’t be sure if, over the centuries, we have made much progress in education.
At the moment there is great enthusiasm about “advances” in education owing to
the Internet. Two teachers at Stanford, for example, put their course on
Artificial Intelligence online and drew an audience of 160,000 students from
all around the world. But science, which deals in one right answer, is more
easily taught without a physical presence in the room, and probably works better
online than humanities courses, whose questions usually have many answers, few
of them permanently right. The Washington Monthly, in its May-June issue, has a
special section called “The Next Wave of School Reform,” a wave that, in the
words of the editor, aims to “improve students’ ability to think critically and
independently, solve complex problems, apply knowledge to novel situations,
work in teams and communicate effectively.” The problem with these waves of
school reform, of course, is that a new one is always needed because the last
one turns out to have tossed up more detritus on the shore than was expected.
The fact is that
we still don’t know how to assess teaching—trial by student test scores, except
in rudimentary subjects, isn’t very helpful—and we remain ignorant about the
true nature of the transaction between teacher and student that goes by the
name of learning. In undergraduate education, we may even have retreated a step
or two through the phenomenon known as grade inflation and through the
politicization of curricula.
The division
between vocational and liberal arts education, which began during the 19th
century with the advent of the land-grant state universities in the United
States, is today tilting further and further in favor of the vocational. Even
within the liberal arts, more and more students are, in Delbanco’s words,
“fleeing from ‘useless’ subjects to ‘marketable’ subjects such as economics,”
in the hope that this will lend them the practical credentials and cachets that
might impress prospective employers.
Delbanco reminds
us of Max Weber’s distinction between “soul-saving” and “skill-acquiring”
education. The liberal arts, in their task to develop a certain roundedness in
those who study them and their function, in Delbanco’s phrase, “as a hedge
against utilitarian values,” are (or at least were meant to be) soul-saving.
Whether, in the majority of students who undertook to study the liberal arts,
they truly were or not may be open to question, but what isn’t open to question
is that today, the liberal arts have lost interest in their primary mission.
That mission, as Delbanco has it, is that of “attaining and sustaining
curiosity and humility,” while “engaging in some serious self-examination.” A
liberal education, as he notes, quoting John Henry Cardinal Newman, “implies an
action upon our mental nature, and the formation of our character.”
Delbanco warns that it won’t do to posit some prelapsarian golden age when higher education approached perfection. Surely he is correct. A good deal of the old liberal arts education was dreary. The profession of teaching, like that of clergyman and psychiatrist, calls for a higher sense of vocation and talent than poor humanity often seems capable of attaining. Yet there was a time when a liberal arts education held a much higher position in the world’s regard than it does today. One of the chief reasons for its slippage, which Delbanco fails directly to confront, is that so many of its teachers themselves no longer believe in it —about which more presently.
I mentioned earlier that the liberal arts were for a good while my second religion. Here let me add that I had never heard of them until my own undergraduate education had begun.
When I was about to graduate from high school as an amiable screw-off, ranked barely above the lower quarter of my class, my father, who had not gone to college, told me that if I wished to go he would pay my way, but he encouraged me to consider whether my going wouldn’t be a waste of time. He personally thought I might make a hell of a good salesman, which was a compliment, for he was himself a hell of a good salesman, and a successful one. I eschewed his advice, not because it wasn’t sound, but chiefly because I felt that, at 18, I wasn’t ready to go out in the world to work.
Delbanco warns that it won’t do to posit some prelapsarian golden age when higher education approached perfection. Surely he is correct. A good deal of the old liberal arts education was dreary. The profession of teaching, like that of clergyman and psychiatrist, calls for a higher sense of vocation and talent than poor humanity often seems capable of attaining. Yet there was a time when a liberal arts education held a much higher position in the world’s regard than it does today. One of the chief reasons for its slippage, which Delbanco fails directly to confront, is that so many of its teachers themselves no longer believe in it —about which more presently.
I mentioned earlier that the liberal arts were for a good while my second religion. Here let me add that I had never heard of them until my own undergraduate education had begun.
When I was about to graduate from high school as an amiable screw-off, ranked barely above the lower quarter of my class, my father, who had not gone to college, told me that if I wished to go he would pay my way, but he encouraged me to consider whether my going wouldn’t be a waste of time. He personally thought I might make a hell of a good salesman, which was a compliment, for he was himself a hell of a good salesman, and a successful one. I eschewed his advice, not because it wasn’t sound, but chiefly because I felt that, at 18, I wasn’t ready to go out in the world to work.
In those days, the University of Illinois was, at least for residents of the state, an open-enrollment school. If you lived in Illinois, the school had to take you, no matter how low in your high school class you graduated. Lots of kids flunked out, and my own greatest fear on the train headed from Chicago down to Champaign-Urbana, in white bucks and reading The Catcher in the Rye, was that I would be among them.
Most of my
friends, Jewish boys from the rising lower-middle class, went to the University
of Illinois to major in business. “Business major” nicely rang the earnestness
gong. Yet the courses required of a business major struck me as
heart-stoppingly boring: accounting, economics, marketing, advertising,
corporation finance, also known as “corp fin,” which sounded to me like nothing
so much as a chancy seafood dish. I was especially nervous about accounting,
for I had wretched handwriting and a dis- orderly mind, which I viewed as two
strikes against me straightaway. Wasn’t there something else I might study
instead of business? A fellow in the fraternity that was rushing me suggested
liberal arts. This was the first time I had heard the phrase “liberal arts.”
What it initially stood for, in my mind, was no accounting.
In my first year at the University of Illinois, I had slightly above a B average. I attained this through sheer memorization: of biological phyla, of French irregular verbs and vocabulary, of 17th-century poems. I also discovered, in a course called Rhetoric 101, that I had a minor skill at prose composition, a skill all the more remarkable for my excluding all use of any punctuation trickier than commas or periods.
After this modest
success, I decided that I was ready for a more exotic institution, the
University of Chicago, to which I applied during my second semester at
Illinois. What I didn’t know then, but have since discovered, was that my
demographic cohort, those people born toward the middle and end of the
Depression, were lucky when it came to college admission, for our small numbers
made colleges want us quite as much as we wanted them. In short, I was accepted
at the University of Chicago, though I would never have been accepted there
today, and that is where I spent the next, and final, three years of my formal
education.
The University of
Chicago had a reputation for great teachers, but I managed, somehow, to avoid
them. I never sat in a class conducted by Leo Strauss, Joseph Schwab, Norman
Maclean, David Greene, or Edward Shils. (Of course, great teachers, like great
lovers, can sometimes be overrated. Later in life, I met a few men and women
reputed to be great teachers and found them pompous and doltish, their minds
spoiled by talking too long to children.) I attended a lecture by David
Reisman, who was then Time magazine-cover famous, and was impressed by what
then seemed to me his intellectual suavity. I sat in on a couple of classes
taught by Richard Weaver, the author of Ideas Have Consequences, but left
uninspired. I was most impressed by teachers from Mittel-Europa, Hitler’s gift
to America, whose culture seemed thicker than that of the native-born teachers
I encountered, and could not yet perceive the commonplace mind that sometimes
lurked behind an English accent.
I took a course
from Morton Dauwen Zabel, who was the friend of Harriet Monroe, Marianne Moore,
and Edmund Wilson. Although not a great teacher, Zabel was an impressive
presence who gave off whiffs of what the literary life in the great world was
like. I took a summer course from the poet and critic Elder Olson, who kept
what seemed a full-time precariously long ash on the end of his cigarette, and
who, after reading from The Waste Land, ended by saying, “How beautiful this
is. Too bad I can’t believe a word of it.”
The students at
the University of Chicago were something else. In his book, Delbanco, defending
the small classroom, refers to something he calls “lateral learning,” which
refers to what a college student learns in class from his fellow students. He
cites Cardinal Newman and John Dewey on this point, and quotes Nathaniel
Hawthorne:
It contributes
greatly to a man’s moral and intellectual health, to be brought into habits of
companionship with individuals unlike himself, who care little for his
pursuits, and whose sphere and abilities he must go out of himself to
appreciate.
A great many of my
fellow students in the College at the University of Chicago seemed to come from
New York City, several others from academic families. They appeared to have
been reading the Nation and the New Republic from the age of 11. Their families
argued about Trotsky at the dinner table. A few among them had the uncalled-for
candor of psychoanalysands. I recall a girl sitting next to me at a roundtable
in Swift Hall volunteering her own menstrual experiences in connection with a
discussion of those of the Trobriand Islanders.
Some among these
University of Chicago students had an impressive acquaintance with books. One
morning in Elder Olson’s class in modern poetry, Olson began quoting Baudelaire
(mon semblable,—mon frère!) and a student next to me, named Martha Silverman,
joined him, in French, and together, in unison, the two of them chanted the
poem to its conclusion. This was one of those moments when I thought it perhaps
a good time to look into career opportunities at Jiffy Lube.
“I invariably took
the first rank in all discussions and exercises, whether public or private, as
not only my teachers testified, but also the printed congratulations and
carmina of my classmates.” So wrote Leibniz about his own classroom
performance. Reverse everything Leibniz wrote and you have a fairly accurate
picture of my classroom performance at the University of Chicago. None among my
teachers there ever suggested that I had intellectual promise. Nor should they
have done, for I didn’t show any, not even to myself. I made no “A”s. I wrote
no brilliant papers. I didn’t do especially well on exams. I was not quick in
response in the classroom.
Only years later
did I realize that quickness of response —on which 95 percent of education is
based—is beside the point, and is required only of politicians, emergency-room
physicians, lawyers in courtrooms, and salesmen. Serious intellectual effort
requires slow, usually painstaking thought, often with wrong roads taken along
the way to the right destination, if one is lucky enough to arrive there. One
of the hallmarks of the modern educational system, which is essentially an
examination system, is that so much of it is based on quick response solely.
Give 6 reasons for the decline of Athens, 8 for the emergence of the
Renaissance, 12 for the importance of the French Revolution. You have 20
minutes in which to do so.
At the University
of Chicago I read many books, none of them trivial, for the school in those
years did not allow the work of second- or third-rate writers into its
curriculum. Kurt Vonnegut, Toni Morrison, Jack Kerouac, Adrienne Rich, or their
equivalents of that day, did not come close to making the cut. No textbooks
were used. You didn’t read “Karl Marx postulated . . .”; you read Karl-bloody-Marx. The working assumption
was that one’s time in college is limited, and mustn’t be spent on
anything other than the first-rate, or on learning acquired (as with textbooks)
at a second remove.
Nor did Chicago
offer any “soft” majors or “lite” courses. I remember, in my final year,
looking for such a course to fill out a crowded schedule, and choosing one
called History of Greek Philosophy. How difficult, I thought, could this be?
Learn a few concepts of the pre-Socratics (Thales believed this, Heraclitus
that), acquire a few dates, and that would be that. On the first day of class,
the teacher, a trim little man named Warner Arms Wick, announced that there was
no substantial history of Greek philosophy, so we shall instead be spending the
quarter reading Aristotle and Plato exclusively.
How much of my
reading did I retain? How much does any 19- or 20-year-old boy, whose hormones
have set him a very different agenda, retain of serious intellectual matter?
How much more is less than fully available to him owing to simple want of
experience? What I do remember is the feeling of intellectual excitement while
reading Plato and Thucydides and an almost palpable physical pleasure turning
the pages of Max Weber’s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism as
he made one dazzling intellectual connection after another. I can also recall
being plunged into a brief but genuine depression reading Freud’s Civilization
and Its Discontents.
The idea behind
the curriculum at the College of the University of Chicago was the Arnoldian
one, abbreviated to undergraduate years, of introducing students to the best
that was thought and said in the Western world. Mastery wasn’t in the picture.
At least, I never felt that I had mastered any subject, or even book, in any of
my courses there. What the school did give me was the confidence that I could
read serious books, and with it the assurance that I needed to return to them,
in some cases over and over, to claim anything like a genuine understanding of
them.
I was never more
than a peripheral character, rather more like a tourist than a student, at the
University of Chicago. Yet when I left the school in 1959, I was a strikingly
different person than the one who entered in 1956. What had happened? My years
there allowed me to consider other possibilities than the one destiny would
appear to have set in grooves for me. I felt less locked into the social
categories—Jewish, middle-class, Midwestern—in which I had grown up, and yet,
more appreciative of their significance in my own development. I had had a
glimpse—if not much more—of the higher things, and longed for a more
concentrated look.
Had I not gone to
the University of Chicago, I have often wondered, what might my life be like? I
suspect I would be wealthier. But reading the books I did, and have continued
to throughout my life, has made it all but impossible to concentrate on moneymaking
in the way that is required to acquire significant wealth. Without the
experience of the University of Chicago, perhaps I would have been less
critical of the world’s institutions and the people who run them; I might even
have been among those who do run them. I might, who knows, have been happier,
if only because less introspective—nobody said the examined life is a lot of
laughs—without the changes wrought in me by my years at the University of
Chicago. Yet I would not trade in those three strange years for anything.
I turned out to be
a better teacher than student. In fact I took to saying, toward the close of my
30-year stint in the English department at Northwestern University, that
teaching provides a better education than does being a student. If he wishes to
elude boredom among his students and embarrassment for himself, a teacher will
do all he can to cultivate the art of lucid and interesting presentation and
the habits of thoroughness. Thereby, with a bit of luck, education may begin to
kick in.
Yet even after
completing three decades of teaching, I am less than sure that what I did in
the classroom was effective or, when it might have been effective, why. Of the
thousands of inane student evaluations I received—“This guy knows his stuff” . . . “Nice bowties” . . . “Great jokes”—the only one that stays in my mind read: “I did well in this
course; I would have been ashamed not to have done.” How I wish I knew
what it was that I did to induce this useful shame in that student, so that I
might have done it again and again!
Student
evaluations, set in place to give the impression to students that they have an
important say in their own education, are one of the useless intrusions into
university teaching by the political tumult of the 1960s. Teaching remains a
mysterious, magical art. Anyone who claims he knows how it works is a liar. No
one tells you how to do it. You walk into a classroom and try to remember what
worked for the teachers who impressed you, or, later in the game, what seemed
to work best for you in the past. Otherwise, it is pure improv, no matter how
extensive one’s notes.
As a testimony to
the difficulty of evaluating the quality of teaching, Professor Delbanco
includes a devastating footnote about student evaluations. One study found that
students tend to give good evaluations “to instructors who are easy graders or
who are good looking,” and to be hardest on women and foreign teachers;
another, made at Ohio State University, found “no correlation between professor
evaluations and the learning that is actually taking place.” As Delbanco notes,
the main result of student evaluations is to make it easier for students to
avoid tough teachers or, through harsh reviews, punish these teachers for
holding to a high standard.
I was not myself
regarded as a tough teacher, but I prefer to think that I never fell below the
line of the serious in what I taught or in what I asked of my students. What I
tried to convey about the writers on whom I gave courses was, alongside the
aesthetic pleasures they provided, their use as guides, however incomplete, to
understanding life. Reading Joseph Conrad, Henry James, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor
Dostoyevsky, Willa Cather, and other writers I taught was important
business—possibly, in the end, though I never said it straight out, more
important than getting into Harvard Law School or Stanford Business School.
When I taught courses on prose style, I stressed that correctness has its own
elegance, and that, in the use of language, unlike in horseshoes, close isn’t
good enough; precision was the minimal requirement, and it was everything.
How many students
found helpful what I was trying to convey I haven’t the least notion. If
anything I said during the many hours we were together mattered to them, I
cannot know. Not a scholar myself, I never tried to make scholars of my
students. A small number of them went on to do intellectual work, to become
editors, critics, poets, novelists; a few became college teachers. Did my
example help push them in their decision not to go for the money? Some of the
brightest among them did go for the money, and have lived honorable lives in
pursuit of it, and that’s fine, too. A world filled with people like me would
be intolerable.
When I taught, I
was always conscious of what I thought of as the guy in the next room: my
fellow teachers. During my teaching days (1973-2003), I could be fairly certain
that the guy in the next room was teaching something distinctly, even starkly,
different from what I was teaching. This was the age of deconstruction,
academic feminism, historicism, Marxism, early queer theory, and other, in
Wallace Stevens’s phrase, one-idea lunacies. A bright young female graduate
student one day came to ask me if I thought David Copperfield a sexual
criminal. “Why would I think that?” I asked. “Professor X thinks it,” she said.
“He claims that because of the death in childbirth of David Copperfield’s wife,
he, Copperfield, through making her pregnant, committed a crime.” All I could
think to reply was, “I guess criticism never sleeps.”
While not wishing
to join the dirge-like chorus of those who write about the fate of higher
education in our day, Andrew Delbanco does not shy from setting out much that
has gone wrong with it. He highlights the importance everywhere accorded to research
over teaching among faculty. He notes the preeminence of science over the
humanities, due to the fact that science deals with the provable and can also
lead to technological advancement, and hence pays off. (He mentions the sadly
mistaken slavishness of the humanities in attempting to imitate science, and
cites the advent of something called the “literature lab” as an example.) He
brings up the corruption implicit in university presidents sitting on corporate
boards, the fraudulence of big-time college athletics, some of whose football
and basketball coaches earn more than entire academic departments, and much
more.
Delbanco, a
secular Jew and a man of the Vietnam generation, is nonetheless ready to allow
the pertinence of the earlier Protestant view of higher education in the
liberal arts:
The era of
spiritual authority belonging to college [when it was under religious auspices]
is long gone. And yet I have never encountered a better formulation—“show me
how to think and how to choose”—of what a college should strive to be: an aid
to reflection, a place and process whereby young people take stock of their
talents and passions and begin to sort out their lives in a way that is true to
themselves and responsible to others.
College: What It
Was, Is, and Should Be gives a clear picture of all the forces, both within and
outside the university, working against the liberal arts. Yet Delbanco lets off
the hook the people who were in the best position to have helped save them—the
teachers, those “guys in the next room.” Much could be said about teaching the
liberal arts before the Vietnam generation came to prominence (which is to say,
tenure) in the colleges: that it could be arid, dull, pedantic, astonishingly
out of it. But it never quite achieved the tendentious clownishness that went
into effect when “the guys in the next room” took over.
Not that the
ground hadn’t been nicely prepared for them. Universities had long before
opened themselves up to teaching books and entire subjects that had no real
place in higher education. Take journalism schools. Everyone who has ever
worked on a newspaper knows that what one learns in four years in journalism
school can be acquired in less than two months working on a newspaper. But as
journalism schools spread, it slowly became necessary to go through one in
order to get a job on a large metropolitan daily. Going to “journ” school
became a form of pledging the fraternity. Everyone else in the business had
pledged; who are you, pal, to think you can get in without also pledging? And
so journalism schools became mainstays of many universities.
Then there is the
business school, especially in its MBA version. Business schools are not about
education at all, but about so-called networking and establishing, for future
employers, a credential demonstrating that one will do anything to work for
them—even give up two years of income and pay high tuition fees for an MBA to
do so. As with an American Express card, so with an MBA, one daren’t leave home
without one, at least if one is applying for work at certain corporations. Some
among these corporations, when it comes to recruiting for jobs, only interview
MBAs, and many restrict their candidate pools to MBAs from only four or five
select business schools. Pledging the fraternity again.
Soon, the guys in
the next room, in their hunger for relevance and their penchant for
self-indulgence, began teaching books for reasons external to their intrinsic
beauty or importance, and attempted to explain history before discovering what
actually happened. They politicized psychology and sociology, and allowed
African-American studies an even higher standing than Greek and Roman classics.
They decided that the multicultural was of greater import than Western culture.
They put popular culture on the same intellectual footing as high culture
(Conrad or graphic novels, three hours credit either way). And, finally, they
determined that race, gender, and social class were at the heart of all
humanities and most social science subjects. With that finishing touch, the
game was up for the liberal arts.
The contention in
favor of a liberal arts education was that contemplation of great books and
grand subjects would take students out of their parochial backgrounds and
elevate them into the realm of higher seriousness. Disputes might arise from
professor to professor, or from school to school, about what constituted the
best that was thought and said—more Hobbes than Locke, more Yeats than
Frost—but a general consensus existed about what qualified to be taught to the
young in the brief span of their education. That consensus has split apart, and
what gets taught today is more and more that which interests professors.
Columbia still
provides two years of traditional liberal arts for its undergraduates. The
University of Chicago continues to struggle over assembling a core curriculum
based on the old Robert Hutchins College plan. St. John’s College, both in
Annapolis and in Santa Fe, has, from its founding, been devoted to the cult of
the liberal arts, even to the point of having its students study medieval
science. The hunger among students for the intellectual satisfaction that a
liberal arts education provides is not entirely dead. (At Northwestern, a
course in Russian novels taught by Gary Saul Morson attracts 600 students,
second only to the recently canceled notorious course in sex education offered
by the school.) But the remaining liberal arts programs begin to have the
distinct feel of rearguard actions.
The death of
liberal arts education would constitute a serious subtraction. Without it, we
shall no longer have a segment of the population that has a proper standard
with which to judge true intellectual achievement. Without it, no one can have
a genuine notion of what constitutes an educated man or woman, or why one work
of art is superior to another, or what in life is serious and what is trivial.
The loss of liberal arts education can only result in replacing authoritative
judgment with rivaling expert opinions, the vaunting of the second- and
third-rate in politics and art, the supremacy of the faddish and the
fashionable in all of life. Without that glimpse of the best that liberal arts
education conveys, a nation might wake up living in the worst, and never
notice.
No comments:
Post a Comment