Real Clear Politics
 
 

California Higher Education's Hollow  Core
By _Peter  Berkowitz_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/peter_berkowitz/)  - August 29, 2012
 
 
"I look to the diffusion of light and education," wrote Thomas Jefferson in 
 1822, "as the resource to be relied on for ameliorating the condition, 
promoting  the virtue, and advancing the happiness of man."  
Thus the 79-year-old Founding Father -- principal author of the Declaration 
 of Independence, first secretary of state, third president of the United 
States,  and founder of the University of Virginia -- reaffirmed his 
life-long conviction  that the American experiment in self-government depended 
on 
the quality of  citizens’ education.
 
The people of California might seem to agree. Echoing Jefferson’s wise 
words,  their state constitution provides that “A general diffusion of 
knowledge 
and  intelligence being essential to the preservation of the rights and 
liberties of  the people, the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means 
the promotion  of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricultural 
improvement.” 
Unfortunately for the citizens of the nation’s most populous state -- and,  
because it is a bellwether, for citizens of the whole nation -- California  
legislators are betraying their constitutional duty and thereby thwarting 
the  people’s abiding interest in cultivating a citizenry capable of 
conserving  liberty and promoting the public interest. 
That is the chastening but not unexpected conclusion of “_Best  Laid Plans_ 
(http://www.goacta.org/publications/downloads/CaliforniaReport.pdf) : The 
Unfulfilled Promise of Public Higher Education in  California,” a 
wide-ranging and well-documented report recently released by The  American 
Council of 
Trustees and Alumni (ACTA). 
“Best Laid Plans” recognizes the distinctive achievements of the three  
pillars of California public higher education. The California Community 
Colleges  system offers open access and a stepping-stone toward a four-year 
degree; it “is  now the largest higher education system in the nation, serving 
2.6 
million  students annually.” 
The regionally based and teaching-focused California State system “is one 
of  the largest multi-campus BA and MA programs in the world.” And the 
University of  California system, which educates top undergraduates, trains 
doctoral students,  and provides professional education in law, medicine, and 
business “can boast of  having among its current and emeriti faculty nine Nobel 
Laureates, 32 MacArthur  Fellows, 141 members of the National Academy of 
Sciences, and four Pulitzer  Prize winners.” 
Long the gold standard of public higher education in America, California’s  
three-pillared system is today on a collision course with harsh fiscal 
realities  and exemplifies the gutting of liberal education across the country. 
To be sure,  the state’s straitened finances have hit California public 
higher education  hard. But the most serious infirmities of California 
taxpayer-funded colleges  and universities, ACTA shows, are self-inflicted. 
Some reflect the failure to manage effectively forces that have been  
inflating the nationwide higher education bubble. The cost of attending 
college,  
greatly outpacing the rate of inflation almost everywhere, has skyrocketed 
in  California: Whereas nationwide tuition and fees at public universities 
over the  last five years have risen on average by 28 percent, the average 
increase at UC  campuses is an astounding 73.1 percent and, at Cal State 
campuses a still more  astounding 83.8 percent. While turning away students and 
seeking billions for  new buildings, California institutions are 
significantly under-using classroom  and laboratory space. And, absent drastic 
reform, 
in little more than a decade  the Cal State and UC systems are unlikely to be 
able to meet their obligations  to faculty retirement programs. 
More menacing to higher education in California is educators’ adoption of  
curricula, classroom pedagogy, and limitations on free speech that fly in 
the  face of liberal education’s fundamental requirements. These practices 
also fly  in the face of public opinion. 
A Roper survey (commissioned by ACTA) shows that the public by a wide 
margin  favors a required core college curriculum, with strongest support for 
it 
coming  from those ages 25-34. Nevertheless, California universities neglect 
general  education courses, which ACTA defines as “broad in scope, exposing 
the student  to the rich array of material that characterizes the subject.” 
The situation is less severe among the 23 Cal State campuses: Almost all  
require undergraduate general education courses in composition, government 
and  history, math, and sciences. In the elite UC system, however, the 
situation is  dismal. 
Berkeley and Davis, according to ACTA, lack general education requirements  
worthy of the name in composition, literature, foreign language, government 
and  history, economics, math, and science. Of the nine UC campuses, only 
Santa  Barbara imposes a substantial general education requirement in 
literature, and  only UCLA in a foreign language. No UC campus requires in 
government and history  or in economics a basic course of the sort that 
introduces 
students to the  fundamentals, scope, and significance of the subject. 
California higher education, moreover, undermines academic freedom by both  
abolishing proper obligations and imposing improper restrictions. In 2003, 
the  system opened the door to classroom indoctrination by replacing 
guidelines that  obliged professors to present inconvenient facts and 
alternative 
points of view  with guidelines that merely direct them to offer students 
conclusions based on  “professional standards of inquiry.” 
Those who doubt that politicization can permeate professional standards and 
 swallow disciplines whole can quickly disabuse themselves of such naiveté 
by  attending the annual national conferences of the Modern Language 
Association or  the Middle East Studies Association. 
Nor are expressions of opinion outside the classroom safe on California  
campuses. U.S. Supreme Court decisions interpreting the First Amendment  
protection of speech disallow exceptions for hate speech and generally prohibit 
 
speech restrictions based on content. And a 2006 California law bars public  
colleges and universities from punishing students for constitutionally 
protected  speech. 
Nevertheless, reports ACTA (drawing on a study by the indispensable  
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education), “every single public college or 
 
university in the state of California has adopted restrictive speech and  
harassment codes that inhibit free speech and permit the politicization of the  
classroom.” 
Only last month, the UC president’s own Advisory Council on Campus Climate, 
 Culture, and Inclusion illustrated the withering of universities’ 
instincts for  freedom by issuing a report -- currently under review -- calling 
on 
UC President  Mark Yudof to “adopt a hate speech-free campus policy.” 
The California Board of Regents has a moral, political, and legal duty to  
compel professors and university administrators to do their job, which is to 
 educate students for liberty. If the regents can’t or won’t, and if the  
legislature refuses to exercise its oversight responsibilities mandated by 
the  California Constitution, the people of California should rouse 
themselves,  rally, and demand an accounting, since liberal education is 
crucial to 
their  freedom, prosperity, and happiness.

-- 
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