Lots of Sound, Not So Much Fury

I continue to struggle to try to understand what is really going on in the efforts to at least begin to regulate the for-profit sector in a reasonable way. We need strong regulations if we are going to be able get beyond the stereotype of being the used car salespeople of the higher education system. Too much of this energy seems misdirected. This sentence, for example, (from “Lawmakers hear conflicting reports on for-profit colleges“) sounds plausible even if you remove the word “for profit” : “…colleges may be using unethical recruitment practices and charging too much for degrees while failing to prepare students for jobs.”

I don’t think all schools use unethical recruiting methods, but recruiting abuses, in legacy admissions and sports, to name only two examples, are not uncommon in the public system. The promise of a job, often unsupported by any evidence, has long been a staple of higher education. The for-profits didn’t do anything new, they simply built on what the system had long accepted as common practice. No real regulatory agency is watching recruitment; the public schools can raise tuition as high as they want. No one’s watching that, either. Student debt has long been an endemic problem in a system so reliant on loans and not grants.

We need recruitment regulations that will cover all sorts of potential abuses in all schools, private to public, from athletic bribes, to high pressure sales techniques, to legacy admissions and the lack of diversity. We need a system of public subsidy– and a generous loan forgiveness program– to eliminate student debt. Schools that receive public money should not be able to waste so much of it on administrative salaries and expensive marketing programs. We need some sort of public discussion about the purposes of higher education and the limits of capitalism. No school should be able to promise the jobs that only public policy can deliver.

Historical Truthiness

Stephen Colbert’s notion of truthiness, coined 6 or so years ago, still effectively describes the rhetoric of the current crop of Republicans. The phenomena may have grown much deeper roots than I thought, too. It’s bad enough when a publicity seeking television star, having taken on the false trappings of a presidential campaign, first fabricated and then defended a profoundly “truthy” version of Paul Revere’s famous ride. The ring wing lack of respect for history, to put it mildly, is reflected in their public education policies as much in their public pronouncements.

That’s fairly superficial, and not too unlike what salespeople of all sorts have always done when speaking extemporaneously. It’s also an important characteristic of Reagan-era Republican practice. The Gipper was known to mix up movie plots and reality. It might be a mistake or it might be more purposeful. It’s probably impossible to tell, particularly when the speaker is Sarah Palin, who seems unable to admit to her own mistakes, no matter how obvious.

What is clear is that the practice is becoming more acceptable. Palin’s supporters did not simply argue, as they always do, that she was being quoted “out of context” or maligned in some way. This time they decided to take history into their own hands and alter Wikipedia, in hopes of showing that, well, Sarah Palin was being maligned. More disturbingly, a recent survey shows that the ongoing Republican attacks on the public schools have undermined the teaching of history. That’s the fertile ground for Republican truthiness.

Stop Making Sense

I think that the Chronicle of Higher Education is getting better… This week they’ve included a fascinating look (“How educated are state legislators?“) at the education levels of our elected officials in state legislatures. They are more educated than the public at large, not surprisingly, but perhaps surprisingly more than a quarter have no post-second education. Maybe it’s just state stereotypes but there’s some surprises.

Texas (86.2%) is more educated than Illinois (81.9%) and California is ahead of both (89.9%) but not that much more educated that Texas. Nebraska is up there with New York, Texas, California, and Virginia in the top five. The least educated is New Hampshire (53.4) which seems odd; the second lowest is Maine (58%), which has a lower percentage than Delaware (59.7), New Mexico (59.7%) and Arkansas (60.4%).

Democratic representatives seem to all support education, at least nominally but the Chronicle found both a Republican yahoo (“You go to college, you take a foreign language, and all these ridiculous diversity requirements…” and a reasonable Republican: “When costs go up, the rich can handle it and many poor students receive grants to cover their expenses,” she says. “But for middle-class families like my own, it makes a huge difference.”