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Penn State head: lawmakers at odds with climate-focused students

Politicians emphasising jobs while students want impact, Eric Barron tells THE summit

Published on
April 22, 2021
Last updated
July 16, 2025
Group of demonstrators fight for climate change action
Source: iStock

Students are moving well ahead of the policymakers who control their universities in prioritising social value over job training, the president of Pennsylvania State University said.

Eric Barron said he was seeing a widening disconnect as state lawmakers increasingly emphasised employment-related needs as their chief motivation for higher education policy and budgets.

Discussing legislators, he told the 探花视频 Innovation & Impact Summit: 鈥淭his may sound a little bit harsh, but they don鈥檛 understand what it is that students are keenly interested聽in.鈥

Dr Barron, who plans to step down as Penn State president in June聽2022 after eight years, joined United Nations environmental education expert Sam Barratt for a session of the online THE conference exploring the drivers of social transformation in academia.

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Mr Barratt, chief of the Youth, Education and Advocacy Unit of the UN聽Environment Programme, based in Nairobi, said he too saw universities and their funders struggling to keep up with a聽generation that cares more about their wider world than individual job success.

鈥淭he youth voice is the most powerful cog that lives inside a聽university,鈥 said Mr聽Barratt, whose environmental education work connects more than 2,700 universities worldwide. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just trying to give licence to the student voice,鈥 he said.

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The change has come quickly, Dr聽Barron said. It鈥檚 just in the past five years, he said, that student surveys have shown a聽dominant preference for career choices based on social equity and climate change.

Statewide, coal-rich Pennsylvania has set a goal of generating at least half of its electricity from solar by聽2023, with Penn State 鈥 ranked fourth nationally in THE鈥檚 University Impact Rankings 鈥 providing research expertise.

But in terms of satisfying students through such endeavours, Dr聽Barron said, 鈥淭he question is whether that鈥檚 fast enough.鈥

It鈥檚 鈥減robably not鈥, Mr聽Barratt said. Globally, he said, communities were looking to universities to do a better job as role models in聽attacking climate change, and as thinktanks to help figure out solutions.

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鈥淭he world is crying out for universities to be leading more on this,鈥 he said.

Yet students were facing a world of politicians and a wider public who were increasingly limiting their vision of universities to being job training centres, Dr聽Barron said.

鈥淚 constantly see people shaking their heads: 鈥榃hat is wrong with these students 鈥 they don鈥檛 think jobs are the most important thing鈥,鈥 he said.

Eventually, Dr Barron said, the rest of the world will need to adjust. 鈥淭he students are going to win out because they鈥檙e activists and they鈥檙e interested in the topics [relating to social value],鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not just interested 鈥 they鈥檙e passionate about the topics.鈥

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Values-based education: policymakers out of step with climate-focused students, says Penn State leader

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