Posted by Todd Zywicki:
Why Campus Intellectual Diversity Matters:

   The other day, [1]I posted on a [2]new study regarding the ideological
   imbalance on college faculties. There is a huge amount in the
   blogosphere, including of course, a few things [3]right here by Juan.
   It appears that this time around, at least, no one is actually denying
   that the imbalance exists. I'll just comment on one key question that
   has been raised, which is, if there is such an imbalance, does it
   matter (as implicitly raised [4]here)?

   My view is that intellectual diversity matters because it goes to the
   core of a liberal education. (My remarks here will focus on colleges,
   because the underlying study doesn't address law schools).

   The way I see it, college education exists for three purposes: (1) to
   develop human capital, (2) to educate and develop critical thinking
   skills in students, and (3) to develop individuals who can participate
   as responsible citizens in a free and democratic society.

   (1) Developing human capital: Ideological diversity has little to do
   with this really because it is just developing skills, such as in
   engineering, science, and business administration. Clearly this is an
   important part of education, but not the only thing, because otherwise
   we wouldn't offer English, Philosophy, etc., in universities. So I
   will set this aside.

   (2) Educating critical thinking skills: Ideological diversity has a
   lot to do with this. The purpose of education should be to teach
   students how to think, not what to think. I don't know how you can
   teach students to analyze arguments and determine the truth value
   about claims about the world if you don't expose them to a variety of
   ideas. As [5]Greg Ransom observes the presence of an intellectual
   orthodoxy on campus can severely hamper student's critical reasoning
   skills. Ransom's experience is that many students do in fact absorb
   some degree of indoctrination at a very superficial level, and that
   the virtual absence of any serious counterarguments leaves them at
   this very superficial and unreflective mode of analysis. I think this
   is probably right--for instance, I am amazed at the shallowness of
   analysis that I hear from ostensibly educated students. Comments I
   hear about environmental issues, in particular, come to mind.

   (3) Educating citizens for a free and responsible society: One of our
   major goals as educators is to educate good citizens who can
   participate in the governance of a free and democratic society. If so,
   it seems to me that it is imperative that students be exposed to all
   viewpoints about the world and to learn to evaluate the truth and
   resonance of competing world views. Living together as citizens in a
   free society, and having the kinds of connections and conversations
   that make that possible, requires developing a depth of understanding
   that cannot be created in an atmosphere of one-sided intellectual
   orthodoxy. It is a pretty short road from the impoverished discussions
   in modern universities to the idiocy of Michael Moore and red v. blue
   America. I don't pretend that American political discussion was ever
   that exhaulted, but surely we used to hold educated people to a higher
   standard of discourse then we see today, especially on university
   campuses? I personally would add to this that as part of educating
   free and responsible citizens we should make sure students understand
   the intellectual and historical foundations of the western world, but
   I recognize that this is a more controversial proposition.

   So if the purpose of education is to educate students to think for
   themselves and to develop critical thinking skills about the world, as
   to become good citizens, leaders, and self-reliant individuals, does
   this require a diversity of opinion on the faculty? Or is it
   sufficient to leave up to individual professors on the honor system to
   try to present all sides of an issue in class and to make sure that
   students engage the various arguments on all sides of an issue?

   While there are many good professors who create an open and balanced
   forum for a true exchange of ideas, there are many situations where
   this plaintly is not the case. Most obviously, the entire point of
   many courses today is to present a particular viewpoint, not to create
   a balanced discussion, such as Women's Studies, African-American
   Studies, and GLBT Studies (for instance, when Dartmouth added a GLBT
   Studies program a few years ago, its first course was taught by a
   local activist, rather than a properly-qualified professor). Second,
   it is beyond question that many professors abuse the power of their
   podium in order to advance their particular ideological views and to
   attack those with competing ideas. When I was in college, for
   instance, my required introductory class for my major on international
   politics consisted of a sustained rant by the professor against Ronald
   Reagan and the Strategic Defense Initiative and why we needed to
   maintain the policy of Mutually Assured Destruction (this was in
   1984). My "History of the American South" class was a one semester
   narrative by a Marxist professor on how rich southern whites had
   conspired to manipulate racist sentiments among lower-class whites to
   keep them from banding together in the "natural" economic alliance of
   poor whites and blacks to plunder the property of rich whites. He was
   the only one who taught it, so if I wanted to take it (I was from
   South Carolina, so I was interested in it), I had to take it from him.
   I could go on, but I'm sure everyone has their own similar horror
   stories. The clear purpose of those teaching these classes it to
   proselytize and try to tell students what to think. Add political
   correctness into the mix and this is a pretty potent stew.

   Leaving aside these obviously biased courses and professors, even the
   best professors are going to have a tendency to teach to their
   strengths and what they know best and are most interested in. And, I
   believe, this is perfectly natural, and probably is the way it should
   be because that is what makes for the best educational experience. But
   this is why you need to have professors with a variety of interests
   and strengths. Even something as simple as putting together a syllabus
   reflects a professor's views about what is important or interesting. I
   don't think that my experience as a Government major was unique--I
   read Marx in almost every class (often even in classes where he didn't
   even seem relevant). But for the fact that at the time Dartmouth had a
   Burkean and a Straussian on the faculty--both now retired--I don't
   know that I would have ever read Burke, Locke, or The Federalist.
   Fortunately I stumbled across the [6]Institute for Humane Studies
   while I was in college, and so was exposed to classical liberal and
   conservative thinkers. But this requires taking the effort to look
   beyond the campus.

   Intellectual diversity, therefore, is crucial in that exposes students
   to a variety of ideas and perspectives, and through that developes
   critical thinking skills and an understanding of different ways of
   seeing the world which is necessary for living in a free and
   democratic society. I think the failure to have a serious
   representation of libertarian and conservative professors on campus,
   and the resultant tendency of the left to trivialize that world view
   (which is, after all, held by roughly 50% of students!), breeds a
   cynicism in students about the whole intellectual enterprise in which
   we are engaged. If the university itself doesn't take ideas seriously
   and doesn't care about free, open, and informed discussion of ideas,
   why would we possibly think that students would be any more interested
   in it? And if we aren't going to teach them critical reasoning skills
   and to search for truth, they may as well major in Computer Science or
   Business Administration.

   When universities fail to do their job, it seems to me that we get one
   of two results. First, we can get the shallow indoctrination
   phenomenon described by Ramson--opinions without serious intellectual
   support. Or second, we can the "tuning out" effect that I described in
   my earlier post, where students simply ignore what happens in class
   and just regurgitate the mantra that they are fed. Either way, we have
   failed at the task of education.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2005_03_27-2005_04_02.shtml#1112111400
   2. http://www.bepress.com/forum/vol3/iss1/art2/
   3. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2005_03_27-2005_04_02.shtml#1112295578
   4. 
http://ciceronianreview.typepad.com/ciceronian_review/2005/03/bad_ideas_and_b.html
   5. http://www.hayekcenter.org/prestopunditarchive/006197.html
   6. http://www.theihs.org/

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