Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Dr. Gregorian's 3 R's: Reading, Writing and Recession

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dr. Gregorian's 3 R's: Reading, Writing and Recession

    Dr. Gregorian's 3 R's: Reading, Writing and Recession

    Published on Saturday, January 31, 2009 by CommonDreams.org

    by Michael Winship

    That was quite a crowd at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, last
    week. Thousands of students took to the streets in protest. But it
    wasn't an antiwar march -- the campus has a reputation for a lack of
    activism. It wasn't even a pep rally for UNLV's beloved, championship
    basketball team, the Runnin' Rebels.

    No, they came out to raise hell as they never have before because Jim
    Gibbons, the governor of Nevada, just proposed state budget cuts to
    higher education of a whopping 36 percent. At UNLV, that could mean a
    budget slash of as much as 52 percent and possible tuition increases of
    225 percent.

    UNLV student and employee Helen Gerth told the Las Vegas
    Review-Journal, "By the time they get through cutting the budget, this
    will be a ghost town."

    Meanwhile, in Tucson, Arizona, a record thousand people crowded into a
    meeting of the Arizona Board of Regents to voice their outrage at a
    proposed cut of more than $600 million from the state's university
    system. School presidents there say such draconian budget rollbacks
    could force the elimination of academic departments, even entire
    colleges.

    Lest you think this is a phenomenon limited to the Great American
    Southwest, things are bad all over. With state governments looking down
    the barrel of more than $300 billion worth of deficits this year and
    next, the long knives are out and money for higher public education is
    a serial victim. Twenty-six states already have either cut their
    budgets for higher education, raised tuition fees or enacted a
    combination of both. When it come to college affordability, a report
    from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education,
    "Measuring Up: 2008," gives a failing grade of "F" to 49 of the 50.
    Tuition at public four-year colleges is up an average of more than
    $6500; at two year schools, almost $2500.

    Less and less of that money is going to actual teaching and more of it
    to administrative and support services. Despite that, The Chronicle of
    Higher Education reports that many college buildings are "outdated,
    inefficient, even crumbling."

    The states are paring away at their future noses to save their current
    financial faces, say leading academics, denying dollars to higher
    education when it's more of an absolute necessity than ever, providing
    jobs, retraining those who've been laid off, generating the basic and
    applied research that in the past has driven a country once
    world-renown for invention and productivity. As one of those who spoke
    at the Arizona Board of Regents meeting said, "You cannot cut yourself
    out of a recession. You must grow your way out."

    Last October, a meeting was convened in New York City, a gathering of
    leaders of higher public education who came here to try figure out a
    way to cope with the current economic crisis and its devastating impact
    on America's public colleges and universities. The conference was
    organized by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the philanthropic
    foundation that fosters and promotes educational opportunity and
    increased civic participation, and its president, a human dynamo whose
    career is testament to the value of a lifetime of learning.

    Vartan Gregorian, the former president of the New York Public Library
    and Brown University, is a man of erudition and charm with a passion
    for philanthropy and wider education. The conference of educators he
    and the Carnegie Corporation sponsored last fall resulted in a two-page
    page ad published in major newspapers, an open letter to then
    President-elect Obama asking that whatever economic stimulus package
    comes out of Washington in the next few weeks, five percent of it --
    around 40 to 45 billion dollars -- go to higher education that will
    "propel the nation forward in resolving its current economic crisis and
    lay the groundwork for international economic competitiveness and the
    well-being of American families into the future."

    Gregorian spoke with my colleague Bill Moyers on the most recent
    edition of Bill Moyers Journal on PBS and noted that it was during
    another national crisis -- the Civil War -- that Abraham Lincoln had
    the foresight to sign the Morrill Act establishing public land-grant
    colleges and universities. Its purpose, the legislation stated, was,
    not only to create public institutions of higher learning that would
    teach the traditional curriculum of science and "classical studies" but
    "to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and
    the mechanic arts... in order to promote the liberal and practical
    education of the industrial classes in the several pursuits and
    professions in life."

    Lincoln supported the law because he realized the value of education
    for people who could use the land grant schools not only to advance
    knowledge but also to learn a trade. Unfortunately, Gregorian said, the
    public "has the impression that the land grant universities are
    providing free education to the public. That's not the case."

    Public colleges and universities can't compete with private schools, he
    said, because the salary differentials are so great, yet, "Eighty
    percent of our nation's talent, in every domain, from lawyers to
    engineers to doctors, come from public higher education."

    Gregorian includes two-year community colleges as well as four-year
    schools. "We're talking about how to build the next generation of our
    youth to be able to compete globally, and re-engineer our nation's
    reemergence in the next phase of global competition," he explained. "We
    need all the infrastructure. We need all the engineers, all the
    doctors, all the computer specialists... We can no longer allow 50
    percent of our students not to graduate from high school, or 30, 40
    percent to drop out from our universities, especially minorities and
    others...

    "We need... to participate as citizens in the fate and future of our
    country... We cannot have a democracy without its foundation being
    knowledge, in order to provide progress."

    That need is all the more critical in times of economic crisis and if
    the states are unable or unwilling to come up with the cash, at least
    the House version of President Obama's economic stimulus package that
    passed this week include billions for higher education, so apparently
    someone in the administration is listening to the entreaties of Dr.
    Gregorian and his colleagues. Nonetheless, the legislation still has a
    long way to go.

    There is an upside to the gloom, Gregorian noted. "Merit always counts,
    especially when the economy tanks. You find the true value of
    individuals. I can't tell you how many people are calling me about
    going into non-profit business... People have suddenly stopped in their
    tracks and they're looking to see what they could do otherwise...
    People confront themselves, their values. It's like when you leave a
    hospital with catastrophic news. You see the world differently."

    Michael Winship is senior writer of the weekly public affairs program
    Bill Moyers Journal, which airs Friday night on PBS. Check local
    airtimes or comment at The Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers.
Working...
X