Friday, November 8, 2013

Higher Education as a Civil RIght

Should education be  a civil right?  Here's a piece I published during the '08 general elections on that topic:

Education — Civil Rights of the 21st Century

By James Castagnera

From John McCain’s acceptance speech, the line that stuck out for me was, “Education is the civil rights issue of the 21st century.”
He went on to explain that for him that meant offering parents and students a choice among public, private and charter schools. That choice, of course, only has meaning if parents and students have a variety of schools from which to choose and the financial ability to buy into their schools of choice. More broadly, while the GOP presidential candidate is right about education’s central significance in the new century, his simplistic solution hardly scratches the surface.
In many major cities, high school graduation rates hover around 50%. In a few they dip below the .500 mark. This dismal fact ensures the perpetuation of what Karl Marx called the lumpenproletariat, which is to say, the ragged or rabble lower class. And this, in its turn, ensures perpetuation of the drug wars, gang wars and random killings that characterize our inner cities.
Meanwhile out in the land of suburban sprawl, teen obesity, drug and alcohol abuse, and the random shootings that periodically plague our schools all suggest that affluence alone does not ensure successful students. Taken in this context, the issue of education expands to include family issues, such as divorce rates.
Labor policy, likewise, must be included in the mix. One of the great ironies of our new century is that, while millionaire professional athletes have strong labor unions, workers on the bottom rungs of our economy are often as exploited as their 19th century counterparts. Labor organizations, such as the Service Employees International Union, have a hard time organizing these folks, given the lopsided way in which our National Labor Relations Act is interpreted by the federal courts and bureaucrats. Union prevention and union busting are only another cost of doing business for many major corporations, which also outsource what were once the better-paying positions to Asian and Latin American sweatshops.
Immigration policy also must be addressed in any comprehensive approach to American education. The Supreme Court has said that the children of illegal aliens are entitled to attend public schools. The law remains unsettled as to whether or not such students are also entitled to attend public colleges and universities and, if so, whether they are also entitled to in-state residents’ tuition breaks.
More broadly, are immigrants filling jobs that Americans don’t want to do? Or are Americans declining those jobs because of the low wages, lack of benefits, and miserable working conditions? The use of immigrant labor, legal and illegal, at the bottom of the economic barrel perpetuates the conditions that make these jobs unattractive to anyone but immigrant and migrant workers.
Last but not least is the rising cost of a college education. Too many of our young people are graduating with “mortgages” on their diplomas. Inefficiencies plague the higher education industry. Despite being the only major sector of the economy that can call on its past customers —- its alumni—to continue supporting its operations, and despite substantial gifts and grants from donors and foundations, higher education’s tuition rates continue to outpace inflation significantly. Thus, the proliferation of large student-loan debts.
Yes, Sen. McCain (and Sen. Obama), “Education IS the civil rights issue of the 2ist century.” And it is a complex issue, entangled with equally complex and challenging issues of family, labor, and immigration policy.

From The Progressive Populist, October 1, 2008



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In my opinion, higher education ought to be a right of every American who is able and willing to undertake it.  

As for colleges and universities --- and here I mean public and not-for-profit private institutions I|( I firmly believe that profit has no place in education, which is a public duty and trust) --- we have failed Americans:

1.  American students, alumni and families owe more than a trillion dollars in student loans.  This is a national disgrace and a dangerous bubble waiting to burst.

2.  That millions of college grads are without employment commensurate with their educations is likewise a national disgrace.

3.  Colleges and universities are either state supported or operate free of taxation because they have been given a sacred public mission at which we are failing all too often.

4.  Many college presidents are now grossly overpaid, which not only adds to the cost of college educations, but has a corrupting influence.  Witness the behavior of Penn State's president in the face of the information available about Coach Sandusky down the decades of the latter's inexcusable behavior.

5.  Many faculty don't work hard enough, and in particular do spend enough time in the classroom.  Full-time salaries for part-time jobs are sustained by student loans and exploitation of their adjunct colleagues.

6.  College campuses need not and ought not to be palaces or country clubs.  The "arms race" of residence halls, athletic and recreational facilities, etc. has been --- like our love of fat food --- a self destructive self-indulgence for which the debt-burdened grads must share some of the blame.

7.  Assessment must be embraced by higher ed, as it finally has been by our accrediting agencies.  And assessment should go beyond learning goals to assessment of alumni success… where are they one, two, five, ten, 20 years out?

These are just a few of the things I believe about higher education in the 21st century.  Stay tuned for more in this space.


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