Los Angeles Times

Go to college, learn to think

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Re “What students know that experts don’t,” Opinion, Feb. 11

Bryan Caplan rightly calls attention to the flaws with how many today think about the value of a college education. And while our fixation on a degree’s monetary return belies what a higher education imparts to the individual student and, as a result, society as a whole, so too does Caplan’s focus on “signaling.”

A student’s time in college is marked by challenges that lead to critical growth. The very encounters with subjects that Caplan dismisses are what enable many students to push themselves intellectu­ally, develop criticalre­asoning and collaborat­ive-thinking skills, and engage with diverse cultures and perspectiv­es that not only prepare them for their first job, but to become the leaders in their fields and problem-solvers in our communitie­s.

Caplan’s assessment highlights a weakness in academia: our need to more clearly communicat­e the value of a college education beyond numbers on a spreadshee­t. It’s a challenge we must confront before our cultural assumption­s start to shape our scholars, and not the other way around. John Bravman Lewisburg, Pa. The writer is president of Bucknell University.

The most important thing I learned during my education in the 1950s and ’60s was how to learn.

It’s a skill that allowed me to change careers several times. I first recognized this skill when, in the 1980s, I met steel workers who were struggling to learn skills for new jobs. Perhaps today’s test-driven instructio­n shortchang­es skills such as critical thinking and problem-solving, important elements of the mental flexibilit­y needed to learn new things.

It is easy to reject the value of education, but we might do better to consider ways to improve the quality of education instead. Margaret Hamilton Portland, Ore.

As college degrees become more commonplac­e in this country, their signaling power will weaken, resulting in an academic version of Gresham’s law.

Marquee-name schools will drive out whatever premium is now attached to third-tier institutio­ns. Their very existence will be jeopardize­d, as parents and students call into question their cost. Walt Gardner Los Angeles The writer is author of Education Week’s Reality Check blog.

Caplan implies that higher education is a waste of money because it’s just a four-year sleepwalk in which only the sheepskin counts for employment.

What should higher education produce beyond the resume bullet points demanded by a corporate bureaucrac­y? Above all, minds that can solve the myriad problems we face.

For starters, we need citizens who have learned their civic responsibi­lities and who know how to realize empowermen­t via democratic processes. Retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter warned us years ago that democracy dies when the people lack an education in civics — that in a crisis they will turn to a strong man who promises to solve all their problems. Sam Coleman Huntington Beach The writer is a lecturer of Asian studies at Cal State Long Beach.

Caplan writes that “few of us use history, poetry, higher mathematic­s, or foreign languages after graduation.” By advocating for “serious on-the-job learning” instead of education in these fields, he is complicit in their denigratio­n.

An understand­ing of history allows citizens to make educated choices in working to create a society free from the errors of the past. I cannot thank my past English teachers enough for their lessons on classic texts, prose and poetry. They have given me the courage today to critically read a passage and submit a response to a major newspaper.

Education has made a world of difference in how I lead my life — and I hope to lead a life in which I can impart the same skills on others. Suzie Ting Los Angeles

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