East Bay Times

Colleges are putting their futures at risk

- By Pamela Paul Pamela Paul is a New York Times columnist.

For more than a century, an understand­ing existed between America's universiti­es and the rest of the country.

Universiti­es educated the nation's future citizens in whatever ways they saw fit. Their faculty determined what kind of research to carry out and how, with the understand­ing that innovation drives economic progress.

This gave them an essential role and stake in both a pluralisti­c democracy and a capitalist economy — without being subject to the whims of politics or industry.

The government helped finance universiti­es with tax breaks and research funding. The public paid taxes and often exorbitant tuition fees. And universiti­es enjoyed what has come to be known as academic freedom, the ability for those in higher education to operate free from external pressure.

“Academic freedom allows us to choose which areas of knowledge we seek and pursue them,” said Anna GrzymalaBu­sse, a professor of internatio­nal studies at Stanford University. “Politicall­y, what society expects of us is to train citizens and provide economic mobility, and that has been the bedrock of political and economic support for universiti­es. But if universiti­es are not fulfilling these missions, and are seen as prioritizi­ng other missions instead, that political bargain becomes very fragile.”

Her remarks came during a recent conference on civil discourse at Stanford, ranging from free expression on campus to diversity, equity and inclusion hiring statements. But underlying all the discussion­s was a real fear that universiti­es had strayed from their essential duties, imperiling the kind of academic freedom they had enjoyed for decades.

Of course, there have long been attempts at political interferen­ce in academia, with a distrust of elitism smoldering beneath the widespread disdain for the ivory tower. But in the past few years, these sentiments have boiled over into action, with universiti­es jolted by everything from activism by its trustees to congressio­nal investigat­ions to the wresting of control by the state to the threatened withdrawal of government support.

Loss of confidence

The number of Republican­s expressing a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in universiti­es plummeted to 19% last year, from 56% in 2015, according to Gallup polls, apparently due largely to a belief that universiti­es were too liberal and were pushing a political agenda, a 2017 poll found. But it could get much worse.

“A Trump presidency with a Republican legislativ­e majority could remake higher education as we've known it,” Steven Brint, a professor of sociology and public policy at the University of California, Riverside, warned last week in The Chronicle of Higher Education, citing the potential for the Department of Justice to investigat­e universiti­es for admissions procedures, for example, or penalties for schools that the government determines are overly beholden to social justice priorities. In some states, it could mean decreased funding from the state, the eliminatio­n of ethnic studies or even the requiremen­t of patriotism oaths.

That would bump up against what many students, faculty and administra­tors view as the point of a college education.

“I was reading applicatio­ns for my graduate program,” said Jennifer Burns, a history professor at Stanford. “The person would describe their political activism and then say, `And now I will continue that work through my Ph.D.' They see academia as a natural progressio­n.” But, she cautioned, the social justice mentality isn't conducive to the university's work.

“We have to keep stressing to students that there's something to being openended in our work; we don't always know where we want to go,” Burns said.

Right now, the university's message is often the opposite. Well before the tumultuous summer of 2020, a focus on social justice permeated campuses in everything from residentia­l housing to college reading lists.

“All of this activity would be fine — indeed, it would be fantastic — if it built in multiple perspectiv­es,” noted Jonathan Zimmerman, author of “Whose America: Culture Wars in the Public Schools,” in a 2019 essay in The Chronicle of Higher Education. “For the most part, though, it doesn't.”

Leftward drift

Instead, many universiti­es have aligned themselves politicall­y with their most activist students. “Top universiti­es depend on billions of dollars of public funding, in the form of research grants and loan assistance,” The Economist editoriali­zed last week. “The steady leftward drift of their administra­tions has imperiled this.”

One of the starkest examples of this politiciza­tion is the raft of position statements coming from university leadership. These public statements, and the fiery battles and protests behind them, take sides on what are broadly considered to be the nation's most sensitive and polarized subjects, whether it's the Dobbs ruling or the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program for young immigrants, the Israel-Hamas war or Black Lives Matter.

At last month's conference, Diego Zambrano, a professor at Stanford Law School, made the downsides of such statements clear. What, he asked, are the benefits of a university taking a position? If it's to make the students feel good, he said, those feelings are fleeting, and perhaps not even the university's job. If it's to change the outcome of political events, even the most self-regarding institutio­ns don't imagine they will have any impact on a war halfway across the planet. The benefits, he argued, were nonexisten­t.

As for the cons, Zambrano continued, issuing statements tends to fuel the most intemperat­e speech while chilling moderate and dissenting voices. In a world constantly riled up over politics, the task of formally opining on issues would be endless. Moreover, such statements force a university to simplify complex issues. They ask university administra­tors, who are not hired for their moral compasses, to address in a single email thorny subjects that scholars at their own institutio­ns spend years studying. (Some university presidents, such as Michael Schill of Northweste­rn University, have rightly balked.) Inevitably, staking any position weakens the public's perception of the university as independen­t.

The temptation for universiti­es to take a moral stand, especially in response to overheated campus sentiment, is understand­able. But it's a trap. When universiti­es make it their mission to do the “right” thing politicall­y, they're effectivel­y telling large parts of their communitie­s — and the polarized country they're in partnershi­p with — they're wrong.

When universiti­es become overtly political and tilt too far toward one end of the spectrum, they're denying students and faculty the kind of openended inquiry and knowledge-seeking that has long been the basis of American higher education's success.

They're putting its future at risk.

`The temptation for universiti­es to take a moral stand, especially in response to overheated campus sentiment, is understand­able. But it's a trap.'

 ?? BEN MARGOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People walk on the Stanford University campus beneath Hoover Tower. Some see higher education being at risk.
BEN MARGOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS People walk on the Stanford University campus beneath Hoover Tower. Some see higher education being at risk.

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