Too Much College
by
Walter E. Williams
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In President
Barack Obama's 2012 State of the Union address, he said that "higher
education can't be a luxury. It is an economic imperative that every
family in America should be able to afford." Such talk makes for
political points, but there's no evidence that a college education
is an economic imperative. A good part of our higher education problem,
explaining its spiraling cost, is that a large percentage of students
currently attending college are ill-equipped and incapable of doing
real college work. They shouldn't be there wasting their own resources
and those of their families and taxpayers. Let's look at it.
Robert Samuelson,
in his Washington Post article "It's time to drop the college-for-all
crusade" (5/27/2012), said that "the college-for-all crusade has
outlived its usefulness. Time to ditch it. Like the crusade to make
all Americans homeowners, it's now doing more harm than good." Richard
Vedder – professor of economics at Ohio University, adjunct scholar
at the American Enterprise Institute and director of The Center
for College Affordability & Productivity, or CCAP – in his article
"Ditch ... the College-for-All Crusade," published on The Chronicle
of Higher Education's blog, "Innovations" (6/7/2012), points
out that the "U.S. Labor Department says the majority of new American
jobs over the next decade do not need a college degree. We have
a six-digit number of college-educated janitors in the U.S." Another
CCAP essay by Vedder and his colleagues, titled "From Wall Street
to Wal-Mart," reports that there are "one-third of a million waiters
and waitresses with college degrees." More than one-third of currently
working college graduates are in jobs that do not require a degree,
such as flight attendants, taxi drivers and salesmen. Was college
attendance a wise use of these students' time and the resources
of their parents and taxpayers?
There's a recent
study published by the Raleigh, N.C.-based Pope Center titled "Pell
Grants: Where Does All the Money Go?" Authors Jenna Ashley Robinson
and Duke Cheston report that about 60 percent of undergraduate students
in the country are Pell Grant recipients, and at some schools, upward
of 80 percent are. Pell Grants are the biggest expenditure of the
Department of Education, totaling nearly $42 billion in 2012.
The original
focus of Pell Grants was to facilitate college access for low-income
students. Since 1972, when the program began, the number of students
from the lowest income quartile going to college has increased by
more than 50 percent. However, Robinson and Cheston report that
the percentage of low-income students who completed college by age
24 decreased from 21.9 percent in 1972 to 19.9 percent today.
Richard Arum
and Josipa Roksa, authors of Academically
Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses (2011), report
on their analysis of more than 2,300 undergraduates at 24 institutions.
Forty-five percent of these students demonstrated no significant
improvement in a range of skills – including critical thinking,
complex reasoning and writing – during their first two years of
college.
Citing the
research of AEI scholar Charles Murray's book Real
Education (2008), Professor Vedder says: "The number going
to college exceeds the number capable of mastering higher levels
of intellectual inquiry. This leads colleges to alter their mission,
watering down the intellectual content of what they do." Up to 45
percent of incoming freshmen require remedial courses in math, writing
or reading. That's despite the fact that colleges have dumbed down
courses so that the students they admit can pass them. Let's face
it; as Murray argues, only a modest proportion of our population
has the cognitive skills, work discipline, drive, maturity and integrity
to master truly higher education.
Primary and
secondary school education is in shambles. Colleges are increasingly
in academic decline as they endeavor to make comfortable environments
for the educationally incompetent. Colleges should refuse admission
to students who are unprepared to do real college work. That would
not only help reveal shoddy primary and secondary education but
also reduce the number of young people making unwise career choices.
Sadly, that won't happen. College administrators want warm bodies
to bring in money.
June
26, 2012
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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