by Fred Reed
Today
we’ll destroy the universities and drive professors into the
streets to starve, perhaps pulling themselves by their fingernails
and feeding on remnants of discarded hamburgers. This will reform
western civilization. (This is a full-service column. It doesn’t
mess with the petty stuff.)
Universities are sorry institutions. First, they cost
too damned much. Thirty thousand a year is a bit steep to launch the
tad into a career of half-literate commercial brigandage and rapine.
Second, they’re pretty much worthless. How useful,
for anything at all, are watered-down courses taught in pseudo-academic
zoos dedicated to propaganda and the competitive collection of uneducable
minorities? How useful are inflated grades, remedial arithmetic, college
credit for independent breathing, and subjects like “Post-Modernist
Perspectives On Lesbian, Bisexual, and Simply Puzzled Learning-Disabled
Single Mothers from a Guatemalan Hamlet”?
Most of these wretched schools are no longer worthwhile—don’t
do what they ought, do what they shouldn’t ought, and cost a
devilish lot. They get away with it because they have a monopoly on
the award of diplomas, which we think we need.
Now, what are universities for? What do we expect them
to do, besides charge too much and provide a place to drink beer?
First, to teach the student things; second, by awarding a degree to
provide to others a reasonable assurance that student has indeed soaked
himself in the precious marinades of learning. They no longer reliably
do either.
How can we accomplish these ends without the price tag
and the baffled Guatemalan single mothers?
The trick is to separate education, and measures thereof,
from the possession of a diploma. You ask: How? Curiously, I have
the answer: By the equivalent of home-schooling at the college level.
First, I suggest the establishment of a more thunderous
and definitive parallel of the Graduate Record exams. (We’ll
come to “establishment by whom” in a moment.) These would
measure competence in the material both of high school and collegiate
education. For example, I’d have them give a score in arithmetic
(can you divide fractions?), algebra (can you handle exponents?),
as well as in mathematics at the college level. Remember, high schools
have been enstupidated as much as the universities.
This would separate the possession of knowledge from
the possession of a diploma. Now, could employers be persuaded to
accept scores on this beast of an exam instead of the usual fraudulent
credentials? (Despite the merits of schooling as an improver of our
very own selves, most of us still have to get jobs.)
Maybe.
Employers are very much aware of the dismal output of
the schools. A friend in the State Department tells of the disappearance
of the ability to write clearly. Companies complain that high-school
graduates often barely read and can’t do simple arithmetic,
that graduates of universities frequently are little better.
If I were running a tool-and-die operation, and a kid
aced a real test of arithmetic, algebra, and clear English (I might
want to promote him) I wouldn’t care whether he had been in
rifle range of any particular school. Similarly, if I were hiring
an office manager or a teacher of Latin for a good private school,
I’d prefer high GREs to a doctorate in Education. The former
assure reasonable knowledge; the latter, hopeless incapacity.
The second step is to end the monopoly of professors
on teaching. Like their schools, they are enormously overrated. Some
can teach, and some can’t. They are no better at it than any
number of other people easily found. A PhD is chiefly an award for
wanton patience and lack of initiative and, in most fields, amounts
a union card, intended to prevent competition.
Example: There is where I live in Mexico a woman, literate
and intelligent, who imparts Spanish to North Americans. She could
teach Cervantes to a lawn chair. If she were a college professor,
I’d rate her as one of the five best I’ve known. She couldn’t
teach in an American university because she doesn’t have a PhD.
She’s not in the union.
Ah, but she can teach in her living room. If
academic achievement were measured by a standard test instead of by
diplomas, students who wanted to learn Spanish could study with her,
and demonstrate that they had learned Spanish. Where they had learned
it would, and should, be irrelevant. If they didn’t want to
learn Spanish, they could go away.
Any city has talented people who would teach if they
could. Community colleges usually have a heavy sprinkling of good
people. Absent the dictatorship of the degree, people could assemble
any education they chose, good, bad, liberal arts, specialized, whatever—and
demonstrate it—for a bunch less than thirty thousand green ones
a year.
Current universities would of course remain, the Ivies
for networking and other preemptive brown-nosing, and downscale schools
for drinking yourself into a coma. But the test would still be, for
those who chose to use it, the measure of accomplishment.
Note, incidentally, that the function of professors
is not primarily to teach, but to select the material and to insist
that students show up for class. Sure, sometimes the prof offers useful
explanation or discussion. The study of spoken languages requires
a teacher. Yet there are few subjects that a bright and determined
student couldn’t learn with a textbook and a library. Other
students shouldn’t be studying at all.
A crucial question: Who would write the universal test?
There’s the rub. If the present professoriate got anywhere near
it, they would intellectually disembowel it, translate it into Ebonics,
and stuff it full of crypto-Marxist blather like a taxidermist given
to excess. I would suggest a committee of people who had worked in
their fields but could prove they had never taught.
Universities would of course fight the idea fang and
claw, in hideous English. But they couldn’t do anything
about it. The law does not require that anyone attend college. The
academic union can decide who may award a degree, but it cannot stop
people from taking a test, or from showing the result to whomever
they chose. The government can prevent a superb teacher from describing
himself as being accredited, but it cannot stop him from teaching.
One thing is sure: As long as the degree, however worthless,
is the measure of merit, we will get more propaganda, lower standards,
and less cultivation. Have you noticed that signs on bathrooms today
no longer say “Men” and “Women,” but have
little pictures? I used to think they were for foreigners.
Fred
Reed
©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.
You'll grind your teeth. (He denies that
he gets a kickback from the dental lobby, though no one believes him.)
But you'll think. "I'm an equal-opportunity irritant," says Fred democratically.
Visit his website here.