In November 2021, higher education leader Pano Kanelos launched the University of Austin with the words: 鈥溾澨鼿igher education in the US today is most certainly in crisis听鈥 not, as the right wing claims, from suppression of conservative voices that led to the creation of the University of Austin, but from rising student loan debt, shifting student demographics, increased casualisation of the faculty, and the role of higher education in . This raises the question of whether universities can address these problems and what alternative models of higher education might look like.
The University of Austin proposed to distinguish itself with a focus on 鈥減ursuit of the truth鈥, implying that other universities听鈥 caricatured as bastions of liberal elitism in the cultural imagination听鈥 are not focused on 鈥渢ruth鈥. This assumes, however, that the purpose of the university is to seek truth. This is among the many myths of the contemporary university in the US: that it was founded in the pursuit of knowledge and critical thinking.
The history of higher education in the US tells us otherwise. Unlike in Europe, where higher educational traditions stretch back to the 11th century, universities in the US are relatively young. The university in the US emerged in the 17th century to educate elite young men to take up their place at the helm of a new nation, enabled by and, in turn, upholding enslavement and settler colonialism. Later, inspired by the German research university, Johns Hopkins University originated the model of the US research university (now called R1s in the US). A small subset of US universities adopted the model and made knowledge work the centre of that enterprise, while the remainder听鈥 the vast majority听鈥 maintained a mission of educating a citizenry and preparing students for professions. In our contemporary moment, however, it is impossible to separate these lofty goals from the university鈥檚 role in credentialling.
How might we get closer to the imagined goals of the university: knowledge and critical thinking? A three-pronged approach is necessary: public reinvestment in higher education, reform of existing universities, and imagining new forms of higher education.
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The current funding model for universities in the US is untenable and fails to serve students. Over the past three decades, . This has led to the privatisation of public higher education, in which students have been forced to bear the costs of higher education. Given that budgets are indicators of value, it鈥檚 telling that as American studies professor has written, the systematic defunding of public higher education in the US correlates with increased numbers of black, Latinx, Indigenous and Asian students entering higher education. Public reinvestment is thus a prerequisite to realising higher education reform.
Further efforts are needed to address problems at existing universities. Universities have a responsibility to ensure that people of different racial and ethnic identities, genders, sexualities, abilities, nationalities and immigration status have access to high-quality education. This requires ensuring that curricula reflect these students鈥 identities, needs and interests, and hiring more faculty of colour and more Indigenous faculty. At the same time, universities must reckon with and make amends for their histories of enslavement and ongoing participation in Indigenous dispossession and genocide. Further, universities must resist funding from outside interests looking to interfere in university affairs, such as the Koch听family and .
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It鈥檚 also important to recognise the limitations of universities as agents of change, given that they are, by nature, 鈥渋nstitutions鈥. The model of the 鈥渇reedom school鈥 is one alternative, developed in the 1960s to provide liberatory education to black students. In this tradition, Freedom University in Atlanta aims to 鈥渆ducate and empower undocumented students and fulfil their human right to education鈥. It offers tuition-free college courses and educator training, advocates for policy change, and organises direct actions related to immigration and education. Freedom University is thus one example of an intervention in higher education that promotes pursuit of knowledge and critical thinking.
It is a myth to say that the purpose of the university is to seek truth. But universities can fix themselves, and we need new ones and public funding to realise the promise of higher education.
Roopika Risam is chair of secondary and higher education at Salem State University.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:听Truth and the听American way
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