Jeff Zorn pegs the start of higher education’s decline to shortly before Clark Kerr’s 1963 book, The Uses of the University:
Hailing the rise of the “multiversity,” Kerr welcomed the very developments that have made American higher education so generally lame: the denigration of teaching; the loss of a center, academically and spiritually; the selling out to Big Business, Big Government, Big Foundations (and now, ESPN); the redefinition of “professor” to “grant-grubbing entrepreneur”: the redefinition of “liberal education” to “a smattering of units in random disciplines, then a vocational major: travel agency, insurance, recreational studies, whatever pays the freight.”
(Excerpt from Jeff Zorn’s letter on page 6 of the June 17, 2012, issue of The New York Times Book Review.)
For a brief biography of Jeff Zorn, click here. For images of or relating to Jeff Zorn, click here.
For a brief biography of Clark Kerr, click here. For images of or relating to Clark Kerr, click here.
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