Professor X by In the Basement of the Ivory Tower: Confessions of an Accidental Academic
Author:In the Basement of the Ivory Tower: Confessions of an Accidental Academic [Academic, In the Basement of the Ivory Tower: Confessions of an Accidental]
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Tags: Sociology, Social Science, Part-Time - United States, Anecdotes, Educators, Part-Time, General, United States, Biography & Autobiography, Personal Memoirs, Education, College Teachers, English Teachers - United States, Social Conditions, Part-Time - United States - Social Conditions, Teaching Methods & Materials, English Teachers, Higher
ISBN: 067002256X
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 2011-03-31T05:00:00+00:00
debtor, and we seem rather
cavalierly to be encouraging more
and more students to take it on for
fewer and fewer rewards.
Americans believe in college. A
poll conducted several years ago by
the Chronicle of Higher Education
found that “the public’s trust in
colleges ranks near the top among
all kinds of institutions, right along
with its faith in the U.S. military and
in churches and religious
organizations… . Nearly 93 percent
of respondents agreed that higher-
education institutions are one of the
most valuable resources to the
United States.” 20
That was back in 2004, but, if
anything, the American public is
more college-crazed than ever.
Nearly 70 percent of all those who
graduated from high school from
October 2007 to October 2008 went
on to enroll in some manner of
college program. 21 All this pushing for college has worked. College
enrollment increased from 17.5
million students in the year 2000 to
20.5 million in 2006, an increase of
about 17 percent.22
The American college juggernaut
is in full swing, and unless someone
finds himself imbued with the
entrepreneurial spirit, there are few
other options. “The evidence for the
individual economic benefits of
college is overwhelming,” says
Sandy Baum, professor emerita of
economics at Skidmore College and
senior analyst for the College
Board. “While the wage premium
for a college education is not at its
highest level ever, it is larger than it
was five years ago, and typical
four-year-college graduates earn
more than 50 percent above typical
high-school graduates.” 23
My students believe this; that is
why they are there. But some of
them, I think—particularly when
they are asked, as prospective
medical technologists, to turn in a
paper comparing Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman
Brown” and “The Minister’s Black
Veil”—may have an inkling that we
all have been caught in a trap of our
own making. They may think of all
the second-tier colleges of the
United States, after sitting through
three classes of Hamlet with me, as
“springes to catch woodcocks,” as
Shakespeare would say.
The requirements for higher
education in many occupations are
self-imposed, and probably not
really necessary. As Stephen J.
McNamee and Robert K. Miller Jr.
point out in The Meritocracy Myth:
With so many Americans receiving
college degrees … the overall
return on the investment has
declined. To put it simply, the labor
force is being flooded with new
college graduates. There are fewer
“college level” jobs being
produced by the economy than there
are new college graduates. The
result has been an increase in both
underemployment (e.g., college
graduates waiting tables) and
credential inflation (employers
requiring higher levels of education
for positions without a
corresponding increase in the
demands of the positions
themselves). Under these
conditions, many students perceive
that getting a college education
would not help them so much as the
lack of a college education would
hurt them.24
And why wouldn’t employers
want their workers to have at least a
couple of years of college under
their belts? What’s the harm?
Doesn’t college broaden the mind,
expand the spirit, make for a
measured and reasoning workforce?
Isn’t an expansion of college
enrollment a societal good? I think
that most Americans sincerely
believe this is so, though the
aspirations of their prospective
employers may be more pedestrian.
Here are McNamee and Miller
again:
In the process of credentials
inflation, higher education degrees
come to be required even for some
jobs that may not be very
intellectually demanding or for
which an advanced degree would
hardly seem necessary. For
example, a college degree may not
actually be needed to manage a
video store. But if the pool of
applicants for such a position
comes to include holders
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