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By Michael White | February 24th 2009 11:17 AM | 5 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Michael White

Welcome to Adaptive Complexity, where I write about genomics, systems biology, evolution, and the connection between science and literature, government, and society.

I'm a biochemist


... Full Bio

Over at the Chronicle of Higher Education, Columbia University humanities professor Andrew Delbanco takes stock of recent arguments that the intellectuals are back in charge of government:

What goes on here? Was the historian Richard Hofstadter wrong in his classic Anti-Intellectualism in American Life to detect an irresistible current in our society of "resentment and suspicion of the life of the mind and of those who are considered to represent it"? Has that current weakened or been sufficiently dammed up to explain the election of a president who is reflective about history and ideas as well as about policy and practice?

Those questions were in the air last month in Seattle at the annual meeting of the Association of American Colleges and Universities. The association is devoted to promoting liberal education — which it defines as one that develops in students "a strong sense of value, ethics, and civil engagement" — at all levels, from community colleges to research universities. Without discounting the importance of marketable skills, such an education should include the study of literary and historical texts, philosophical questions and scientific concepts, as well as engagement with foreign cultures.

Many people who attended the meeting felt that the spirit of anti-intellectualism emanating from Washington in recent years has hampered, or even stymied, the pursuit of those aims. The inquisitorial tone of former Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings's National Commission on the Future of Higher Education, with its focus on benchmarks and standardized testing, was frequently cited. But now beleaguered deans and presidents were hoping for better days ahead. What are the chances they are right?

Delbanco goes on to argue that the issue isn't necessarily the presence of ivy league-educated presidential advisors; George W. Bush had those too. The problem is nurturing a culture that shares the values promoted by a liberal arts education, which include both an ethical stance and critical thinking skills.

The public is right to ask whether a college education is really worth the up-front and opportunity costs. At $10,000 or much more per year for four years or more, shouldn't we be teaching marketable skills, instead of providing forums for radical humanities professors to indoctrinate our children? That is the perception that's out there, even if this view is not exactly accurate. Delbanco suggests that the recent "overwhelmingly ironic and iconoclastic" temper coming out of the academic humanities shares some of the blame for turning people off to the value of a liberal arts education.

Academics, in both the humanities and the sciences, need to do a better of job of demonstrating the very practical worth of this kind of education, to rebut the charge that studying great books or physics or evolution is a waste of most students' time, time that could be spent learning something a future employer is looking for.

The best rebuttal of this charge is that nearly all employers value a strong set of critical thinking skills, which are fundamental for learning the detailed, job-specific skills of almost any profession. We're much, much too focused in this country on learning facts and so-called practical skills. Jay Leno makes fun of college graduates who don't know how many moons orbit the Earth, and school boards are concerned about ensuring that my 4th-grader learns to use Power Point. But our problem with education isn't that someone missed that day in class where the teacher discussed the how many moons Earth has or how to set the font size on your PowerPoint slides - the problem is kids with no desire (and no skills) to hone their minds, kids who have no clue that clear thinking is both the best job skill they can have and extremely rewarding on a personal level.

This past week I was a judge at a middle school/high school science fair, and the problem of focusing on a fact-based (as opposed to thinking-based) education was clear, even at a good school. Many of the kids had good general ideas for a science project, but when it came to formulating a clear, measurable question, designing experiments to test the question, and then interpreting their results, the kids were lost. This is unfortunate, because the main reason for doing a science project is to learn how to think scientifically, and not really to learn some new fact. The school science curricula (and history and English and social studies...) need to have the fact content of their courses trimmed significantly, and focus primarily on thinking skills - kids should learn facts only in service to the greater goal of learning to think. (I'm not suggesting that teachers don't know this; individual teachers are constrained by institutional and state requirements.)

We should nurture the culture of critical thinking that a liberal arts education is designed to foster, argues Delbanco, and not spend time worrying about the cycles of anti-intellectualism among the public. To do this means refocusing our schools on this educational core, and making this education available to everyone, regardless of their ability to pay for a fancy education.

Comments

I heartily endorse critical thinking. I've noticed, however, that appreciation for same diminishes noticably when the critical thinking runs into the 'facts' and precepts held dear to those newly ascendant.

Gerhard Adam's picture
"At $10,000 or much more per year for four years or more, shouldn't we be teaching marketable skills, instead of providing forums for radical humanities professors to indoctrinate our children?"

To me, this sentence says it all.  In the first instance, this is a golden opportunity to exercise critical thinking, however it is interesting to note that the first reaction is that "children" are being indoctrinated.
I find it interesting that given some of the "attitude" and culture of youth, that they should become so complacent when faced by something as simple as a professor with an opinion.

Unfortunately, the majority of people in society do not value an education, and neither do their employers.  A prime example is the computer industry where software fads occur every few years, and instead of being interrested in people with a demonstrable history in the field, the average employer is only looking for the current "faddish" skills to employ. 

As was mentioned, in teaching 4th graders to use Powerpoint, the example illustrates how we focus on doing things, without dealing with what should actually go into a Powerpoint presentation.  Researching information is virtually non-existent in schools where the concept of "cut and paste" is the equivalent of looking something up.

In the end, the fundamental problem is our obsession with measurement whether it be with employee performance or student grades.  Critical thinking is not as readily measurable as simply taking a test based on irrelevant facts.  Grades are used to measure testing capability and not knowledge acquisition.

In this society, the only thing valued is how much money someone earns.   If you're a PhD earning less money than a railroad engineer, then you're considered foolish for wasting so much time with "book learning".  Given all the information available between books and the internet, it is utterly amazing that an adult citizen could still proudly declare that "they don't read".

adaptivecomplexity's picture
Grades are used to measure testing capability and not knowledge acquisition.

Especially grades/scores obtained through standardized testing. Good teachers in K-12 schools ought to be able to evaluate how well students meet the learning goals, without relying on easy-to-quantify standardized tests.

In this society, the only thing valued is how much money someone
earns. 

And somehow earning power gets equated with smarts - notice all of the whining about the Wall Street brain drain that's supposedly going to happen if we put salary caps on CEO pay for firms receiving bailout money. Scientists get paid mediocre salaries for much of their careers (certainly nowhere close to investment bankers), and I still think science attracts more of the very smartest people than Wall Street does. Why? Because many of these people value more than just the pay (although financial rewards are a big deal); they value the intellectual challenge, the stimulating environment, the reputation that comes from successfully meeting intellectual challenges. If the job is satisfying and challenging intellectually, you'll get smart people interested, even if they're only paid  a measley $500,000 per year.

Gerhard Adam's picture

I agree that the whining about a brain drain is ludicrous.  There are still plenty of people that would take those jobs, and perhaps we'd even find some that are more competent than those there (which shouldn't be too hard).  It's also important to consider that it isn't just the issue of capping CEO salaries, but coming to terms with why they feel that they should be rewarded for driving businesses into the ground.



Gerhard Adam's picture
I worked for a company some decades ago that had projected a $40 M profit and ended up with a $35 M loss during a single quarter.  So I asked if they had actually gone to school to achieve such a result.  I was told that I just didn't understand how business worked, so I suggested that perhaps a Ouija board might help them smooth out their projections.

Needless to say, they were not amused.

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