by Fred Reed
The
other day I went to the Web site of Bell Labs, one of the country's
premier research outfits. I clicked at random on a research project,
Programmable Networks for Tomorrow. The scientists working on the
project were Gisli Hjalmstysson, Nikos Anerousis, Pawan Goyal, K.
K. Ramakrishnan, Jennifer Rexford, Kobus Van der Merwe, and Sneha
Kumar Kasera.
Clicking again at random, this time on the Information
Visualization Research Group, the research team turned out to be John
Ellson, Emden Gansner, John Mocenigo, Stephen North, Jeffery Korn,
Eleftherios Koutsofios, Bin Wei, Shankar Krishnan, and Suresh Venktasubramanian.
Here is a pattern I've noticed in countless organizations
at the high end of the research spectrum. In the personnel lists,
certain groups are phenomenally over-represented with respect to their
appearance in the general American population: Chinese, Koreans, Indians,
and, though it doesn't show in the above lists, Jews. What the precise
statistical breakdown across the world of American research might
be, I don't know. An awful lot of personnel lists look like the foregoing.
Think about this: Asians make up a small percent of
the population, yet there are company directories in Silicon Valley
that read like a New Delhi phone book. Many of our premier universities
have become heavily Asian, with many of these students going into
the sciences. If Chinese citizens and Americans of Chinese descent
left tomorrow for Beijing, American research, and graduate schools
in the sciences and engineering, would be crippled.
Jews are two or three percent of the population. On
the rough-cut assumption that Goldstein is probably Jewish, and Ferguson
probably isn't, it is evident that Jews are doing lots more than their
share of research-and, given that people named Miller may well be
Jewish, the name-recognition approach probably produces a substantial
undercount. I asked a friend, researching a book on Harvard, the percentage
of Asian and Jewish students. Answer: "Asians close to 20%. Jews
close to 25%-unofficial, because you are allowed to list by gender,
ethnicity, geography, but not religion. Our last taboo."
None of this is original with me. In 1999, the National
Academy of Sciences released a study noting that over half of U.S.
engineering doctorates are awarded to foreign students. Where are
Smith and Jones?
Why are members of these very small groups doing so
much of the important research for the United States? That's easy.
They're smart, they go into the sciences, and they work hard. Potatoes
are more mysterious. It's not affirmative action. They produce. The
qualifications of these students can easily be checked. They have
them. The question is not whether these groups perform, or why, but
why the rest of us no longer do. What has happened?
It is not an easy question, but a lot of it, I think,
is the deliberate enstupidation of American education. Again, the
idea is not original with me. Said the American Educational Research
Association of the NAS report, "Serious deficiencies in American
pre-college education, along with wavering support for basic research,
were cited by the panel as major contributors to this problem."
Consider mathematics. In the mid-Sixties I took freshman
chemistry at Hampden-Sydney College, a solid school in Virginia but
not nearly MIT. It was assumed-assumed without thought-that students
knew algebra cold. They had to. You can't do heavy loads of highly
mathematical homework, or wrestle with ideas like integrating probability
densities over three-space, or do endless gas-law and reaction-rate
calculations, if you aren't sure how exponents work.
Remedial mathematics at the college level was unheard
of. The assumption was that people who weren't ready for college work
should be somewhere else. No one thought about it. Today, remedial
classes in both reading and math are common at universities. We seem
to be dumbing ourselves to death.
I recently had children go through the high schools
of Arlington, Va., a suburb of Washington. I watched them come home
with badly misspelled chemistry handouts from half-educated teachers,
watched them do stupid, make-work science projects that taught them
nothing about the sciences but used lots of pretty paper.
The extent of scholastic decline is sometimes astonishing.
So help me, I once saw, in a middle school in Arlington, a student's
project on a bulletin board celebrating Enrico Fermi's contributions
to "Nucler Physicts" (Scripps-Howard National Spelling Bee
champions: 2003, Sai Guntuyri; 2002, Pratyush Buddiga; 2001, Sean
Conley; 2000, George Thampy; 1999, Nupur Lala).
It appears that a few groups are keeping their standards
up and the rest of us are drowning our children in self-indulgent
social engineering, political correctness, and feel-good substitutes
for learning.
Some of our growing dependency is hidden. We do not
merely rely on small industrious groups in America and on foreigners
working here. Increasingly the United States contracts out its technical
thinking to Asia.
If you read technically aware publications like Wired
magazine (and how many people do?), you find that major American corporations
have more and more of their computer programming done by people in,
for example, India. In cities like Bombay, large colonies of Indians
work for U.S. companies by Internet. This again means that counting
names at American institutions underestimates the growth of intellectual
dependence.
The Indians, and others, have discovered the suddenly
important principle that intellectual capital is separable from physical
capital. To program for Boeing, you don't have to be anywhere near
Seattle. Nor do you need an aircraft plant. All you need is a $700
computer, a book called something like How to Program in C++, and
a fast Internet connection. Crucial work like circuit-design can now
be done abroad by bright people who don't need chip factories. They
need workstations, the Internet, and engineering degrees.
This too we would be wise to ponder. Americans often
think of India chiefly as a land of ghastly poverty. Well, yes. It
is also a country with about three times our population and a lot
of very bright people who want to get ahead. They're professionally
hungry. We no longer are.
People speak of globalization. This is it, and it's
just beginning. Where will it take us? How long can we maintain a
technologically dominant economy if we are, as a country, no longer
willing to do our own thinking? If we rely heavily on less than 10
percent of our own population while employing more and more foreigners
abroad?
It's not them. It's us. I've heard the phrase, "the
Asian challenge to the West." I don't think so. When Sally Chen
gets a doctorate in biochemistry, she's not challenging America. She's
getting a doctorate in biochemistry. Those who study have no reason
to apologize to those who don't.
The Mathematical Association of America runs a contest
for the extremely bright and prepared among high-school students.
It is called the United States of America Mathematics Olympiad, and
it "provides a means of identifying and encouraging the most
creative secondary mathematics students in the country."
An unedited section of a list of those recently chosen:
Sharat Bhat, Tongke Xue, Matthew Peairs, Wen Li, Jongmin Baek, Aaron
Kleinman, David Stolp, Andrew Schwartz, Rishi Gupta, Jennifer Laaser,
Inna Zakharevich, Neil Chua, Jonathan Lowd, Simon Rubinsteinsalze,
Joshua Batson, Jimmy Jia, Jichao Qian, Dmitry Taubinsky, David Kaplan,
Erica Wilson, Kai Dai, Julian Kolev, Jonathan Xiong, Stephen Guo.
Q.E.D.
Fred
Reed
First appeared in The
American Conservative.
©Fred
Reed 2003
Fred Reed,columnist for The Washington
Times, former Marine, streety police writer, occasional terrified
war correspondent,and afficionado of raffish bars, offers weekly his
unique, often satirical and arguably opinionated views on ...everything.
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