“Before
any great things are accomplished, a memorable change must be made in the
system of education and knowledge must become so general as to raise the lower
ranks of society nearer to the higher. The education of a nation instead of
being confined to a few schools and universities for the instruction of the
few, must become the national care and expense for the formation of the many.”
~John Adams
There
was a time when the greater purpose of higher education in the United States
was creating informed citizens who could find a place and engage in a
participatory democracy. Americans have
always prided themselves on being a beacon of democracy to the rest of the
world; an example to counter dictatorial, totalitarian, or fascist regimes. We
as a nation have promoted democracy as the way forward for countries who wanted
to throw off the political and economic shackles of repression.
One
of the instruments of promoting democracy took the form of access to higher
education. Higher learning was seen as a bastion of everything from
enlightenment thought to industrialization. We built cathedrals to higher
education; Harvard University, for example, was founded 140 years before the
American Revolution. The development of creative thinkers with a well-rounded
education that included the Arts and Humanities was held in high regard as a
moral, cultural and economic imperative.
After
the Second World War, the GI Bill allowed millions of veterans to pursue higher
education; for the first time in the nation’s history, higher learning was
accessible to virtually all classes of people. This was truly a
transformational moment in American history; most of the men and women who
benefited from the GI Bill were the first in their family to go to college.
These events coincided with a temporary spike in civic engagement that lasted
well into the 1960s; voter participation was particularly strong at this time (Pintor,
Gratschew & Sullivan, 2003).
It
is clear from John Adams’ quote that the Founders intended a role for the
Federal Government in the education of our nation. However, if Adams’ were
transported from his time to the present, he would not recognize anything in
our current education policy that demonstrated this priority. In fact, for the
last thirty years or so, public education, including higher education, has
either been under attack for supposed inefficiencies while continuously finding
its funding subject to cuts; or has been commodified by corporate interests to
be little more than vocational education factories to supply their too often
temporary, low-paying, benefits-poor labor force. But perhaps the most telling
aspect of the shift in the curriculum emphasis in higher education is the sharp
rise in tuition, with the concomitant need for ever larger student loans.
Student loan debt has exploded in recent years, with solutions to the problem
ranging from forgiving most or all of the debt to abolishing the program
altogether (Raum, 2012). The question is: should student loan debt be reduced
or forgiven? As someone who believes that we cannot call ourselves a fully
functioning democracy if every citizen does not have equality of opportunity, I
argue that not only should student loan debt be reduced or forgiven, but also
that tuition costs should be reduced and that all of this can be paid for if
our national priorities are in order. In this paper I will show how our
priorities have been skewed away from a democratic notion of education to one
that largely benefits corporations and university administrators.
If
we are to comprehend what the Founders intended for educating the American
populace, and how education can feed the soul of democracy, it is instructive
to understand the forces behind the psychology and measures employed to
undermine democracy (while disguised as pro-democracy), bifurcate our education
system along class lines, and blur the distinction between the economic
(capitalism) and the political (democracy) in order to maintain the balance of
power in the direction of big business and away from the average citizen and
their voting voice.
In
the 1920s, government, PR and advertising firms, and business leaders, spurred
by the success of President Woodrow Wilson’s World War I propaganda service,
banded together to form public opinion and habits around “creating artificial
wants, imagined needs, a device recognized to be an effective technique of
control” (Chomsky, 2004). Edward Bernays, a member of Wilson’s propaganda
service and one of the founders of the PR industry, claimed that “the general
public are ignorant and meddlesome outsiders whose role in a democracy is to be
spectators, not participants” (Chomsky, 2004). These business and government
leaders sought to create a “philosophy of futility” and “lack of purpose in
life” (Chomsky, 2004) through the focus on meaningless and superficial
consumption. They knew that, just as in Adolf Hitler’s Germany, a passive,
disinterested public is one that is also easy to control and manipulate; one
that will turn command of their lives over to presumably better educated,
business-savvy men of property. Though the New Deal cultural programs and
introduction of the GI Bill served to ameliorate some of the darker aspects of
this form of brainwashing, the process of cultivating a passive American public
has continued mostly unabated ever since.
Another
aspect of this anti-Democratic agenda was to champion the notion of two sets of
standards for education as it related to democratic participation. Journalist
Walter Lippman, in concert with the aforementioned parties, reported on his
version of “democracy” in the 1920s, stating “…representative democracy
entailed creating two modes of education – one mode would be for the elite, who
would rule the country and be the true participants in the democratic process,
and the other branch of education would be designed for the masses, whose
education would train them to be obedient workers and passive spectators rather
than participants in shaping democratic public life” (Giroux, 2004). On the other hand, in the tradition of John
Adams and the Founders, Henry Giroux makes the case that “Progressives like
W.E.B. Dubois, John Dewey and Jane Addams rejected such a divergence of
educational opportunity outright. They believed that education for a democratic
citizenry was an essential condition of equality and social justice and had to
be provided through public and higher education” (Giroux, 2004).
In
1964, Mario Savio, a leader of the Free Speech Movement, recognized what was
happening to higher education and to students hoping to benefit from it. Before
his now-famous comments on “the operation of the machine,” he told his audience
that University of California at Berkeley President Kerr compared the Board of
Regents to shareholders in a corporation and himself to the manager of said
corporation, which for Savio meant that the students are raw materials, to be
sold in the market place; Savio strenuously objected to this characterization,
stating, “we are not employees, we are human beings!” (Savio, 1964).
The
commodification (we as individuals are a commodity, and our entrance to a
higher social class will cost us) and vocationalization (shift from humanities
to a business-oriented or corporate training model) of higher education has
resulted in ever-rising tuition costs. University presidents are hired from the
ranks of the corporate world and are paid accordingly (as long as they are
generating the appropriate amount of revenue). Universities and corporations
are teaming up to build entire degree programs around entrance directly into
that corporation’s work force, going as far as including the corporate name in
the title of the programs and courses; surely these firms are looking for a
financial payoff. The direct influence of corporations on college and
university curriculum and administration is a recent phenomenon, but it is no
coincidence that its appearance on the scene coincides with the steep rise in
tuition. In the 1980-81 school year, the average tuition fees, for both public
and private four-year colleges and universities, were $8,672; in the 2009-10
school year, they were $20,986 (What are the…2011). During that same span,
median family income was virtually stagnant, ranging from approximately $37,000
in 1980 to approximately $46,000 in 2008 (Median household income, 2009).
Clearly, for the vast majority of Americans, college tuition is not affordable.
Perhaps
one is not convinced that there is a connection between corporate influence at
universities and higher tuition fees. I would like to introduce an additional
tack, then. In France, there are no university tuition fees; in Germany,
students or their families pay only $1,000 per year to attend university (Sheng,
2010). One argument that occasionally surfaces when arguing for reduced fees or
free college education is, “Not one French university appears in the top forty
of world universities; you get what you pay for” (Sheng, 2010). According to
this line of reasoning, there is a correlation between higher tuition fees and
a better education. Then why are American companies going out of their way to
hire foreign workers (Bort, 2011), often paying them less than they would have
to pay an American worker?; and these workers are supposed to be arriving here
after attending inferior schools, whether from Asia or Europe, because higher
tuition fees signal a better education! So we pay higher tuitions to ostensibly
have the best university education, yet there are no jobs for us when we have
completed that education/training and people who have studied in other
countries, presumably with lesser standards and rigor because they pay little
or nothing for it compared to us, are being paid less to do the jobs we have trained
for at supposedly better colleges and universities.
In
an interview with the San Jose Mercury News, the chief executive of Intel,
Craig Barrett, discussed the integration of India, China, and Russia into the
new global economy this way: “I don’t think this has been fully understood in
the United States. If you look at India, China, and Russia, they all have
strong educational heritages…The big change today from what’s happened over the
last 30 years is that it’s no longer just low-cost labor that you are looking
at. It’s well educated labor that can effectively do any job that can be done
in the United States (Herbert, 2004). What about American educational heritage?
Long before the student loan debt problem reared its ugly head, Americans had
been led to believe that we have the best educational system in the world; now
we’re supposed to believe that it’s a good thing to have corporate logos
plastered all over campuses, professors and administrators more concerned about
the bottom line than educating future citizens, and college sports programs
(sponsored by corporations) raking in hundreds of millions while tuitions
skyrocket; and all of this to see good-paying jobs either shipped out of the
country, or filled with foreign workers from “strong educational heritages?”
Then there is the matter of our colleges and universities
becoming increasingly more vocational. This is not working out very well for
Americans, either. The few manufacturing jobs left in this country are now
often filled by workers who went to college, where in the past most of these
positions were filled by less educated workers. Does a college education make
them more productive? It appears not. Productivity levels in most of Europe are
higher than the U.S. (including France); number of hours worked in
manufacturing in Europe has trended higher for several years; and workers are
better paid in these countries (International comparisons of…2011). If
vocationalizing higher education was supposed to improve the corporate bottom
line, it appears it might not be working so well for anyone (unless the company
moved the jobs overseas); especially workers, some who are paying those high
tuitions. We are paying higher tuitions to work longer hours at lower paying
jobs. And we often can’t afford to pay back the student loans.
“Where
did this idea come from that everybody deserves free education? Free medical
care? Free whatever? It comes from Moscow. From Russia. It comes straight out
of the pit of hell” (Moyers, 2003).
Perhaps
the mindset that Texas State Representative Debbie Riddle demonstrates in this
statement is at the root of many of our society’s ills; it also brings us back
to Edward Bernays and Walter Lippman and the indoctrination of the American
public to a condition of apathy. What kind of a society do we want? Do we
believe in democracy, or just pay lip service to the ideology? Do we want to
educate our people to compete in a global economy? If our priority is to
educate Americans toward full participation in democracy and compete globally,
nothing less than a complete shift in how we organize our society is in order.
I am sure the people in Europe and all around the world, whose way of life
comes “straight from the pit of hell” yet who are better educated and more
productive than us, would agree that a good place to start would be to reduce
or forgive student loan debt, lower college tuition substantially, and place
more emphasis on a humanities-driven, well-rounded higher education. No less
than the future of the country is at stake.
References
Bort,
J. (2011, December 06). Despite high unemployment, u.s. companies are hiring
from overseas at record pace. Business insider, Retrieved from
http://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-12-06/news/30481039_1_h-1b-h1b-visa-petitions-visa-program
Chomsky,
N. (2004). On nature and language.
(pp. 182-183). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Giroux,
H., & Searls Giroux, S. (2004). Take back higher education. New York:
Palgrave Macmillan.
Herbert,
B. (2004, January 26). Education is no protection. New York Times. Retrieved from
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/26/opinion/education-is-no-protection.html
Median household income.
(2009). Unpublished raw data, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
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Moyers,
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Pintor,
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Raum,
T. (2012, April 03). Explosion in student
loan debt reaching crisis proportions, but largely flying under radar.
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http://www.coastreporter.net/article/GB/20120403/CP01/304039992/-1/sechelt/explosion-in-student-loan-debt-reaching-crisis-proportions-but&template=cpArt
Savio,
M. (Performer) (1964). Mario savio on the
operation of the machine [Web]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhFvZRT7Ds0
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department of education, National center for education statistics. (2011). What are the trends in the cost of college
education? (NCES 2011-015). Retrieved from Institute of education sciences
website: http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=76
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department of labor, Division of international labor comparisons. (2011). International comparisons of manufacturing
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statistics website: http://www.bls.gov/web/prod4.supp.toc.htm
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