One Step Forward, Two Back

It’s a kind of Republican two-step that’s come to dominate our culture. We take one step forward by proposing to widen access to higher education via an expanded online community college (in this case, in Nevada).   What happens? The republican mind-set, ever ready to milk the government teat, argues that the new or expanded system ought to be out-sourced. We can’t get past our market fetish and to begin to think about the public good.

It keeps happening, too, despite the every growing pile of evidence that as long as we socialize costs and privatize profits we will all continue to grow poorer and poorer as the money pools among an increasingly small group. Increasingly, the Bush years have come to be called the “lost decade“– a full ten years of stagnation and violence, all rooted in the narrow narcissism of the private profit motive.  It used to be simply called greed.

Back to the Future

The thing that’s so interesting– well, exasperating– about new technology is the way it always seems to get used for very old-fashioned purposes. Bill Gates and Stephen Jobs are, after all, in the end not so different from John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie.  All of these men, and many others, took the newest technology and used it for a very traditional end: to build personal wealth. It’s not the only option, of course.

There is public good in what they do,no doubt.  No matter how much the Robber Barons accumulate, people use trains, banks, and computers for all sorts of collectively beneficial purposes. One of these guys might do something unique, too, but aside from the inevitable philanthropy, it just doesn’t seem to be in our cultural DNA. If we are lucky, we might get one Martin Luther King for every 10 to 20,000 Mark Zuckerberg’s.

The internet in general, and higher education in particular, is no different. There’s a lot of talk about innovation, and disruptive change, but the result, in for-profit, public, and non-profit universities alike, seems to be a very traditional goal: “Low-paid adjuncts… Online replicas of existing curricula…”  (“Online Venture Energizes Vulnerable College“). The future of education looks like the present of McDonald’s: low pay, mass production.

Love Me Love Me, I’m a Liberal

If your argument about education is instrumental, that is, if you think that the primary goal of education is to create economic mobility, then your idea of success is necessarily limited. Education by itself cannot alter the fundamental relationships of property that underlie class in general and social inequity in particular.  Education wasn’t ever supposed to do that, though; it was supposed to make these structures more visible.

The liberal, instrumental, view of education, then, which sees education solely in terms of vocation,  necessarily has limits, as John Marsh, has recently argued in “Why Education is Not an Economic Panacea.” Marsh, though, seems to be reifying social processes, assuming that an uneducated society is more or less identical to an educated society.  If learning doesn’t help in the labor market, apparently, it doesn’t help at all.

Yet, arguably, despite what Marsh calls an educational consensus from right to left, the U.S. has never committed itself to the creation of an educated society. Even the crudest measurement— the numbers of people with college educations– shows that even after more 5 decades of post WW II property and expansion, we remain a society in which 2/3’s of the population has never attended college. The  job remains undone.