Friday, April 6, 2012

Report on Indoctrination Within the University of California

"The analysis begins from a nonpolitical fact: Numerous studies of both the UC system and of higher education nationwide demonstrate that students who graduate from college are increasingly ignorant of history and literature. They are unfamiliar with the principles of American constitutional government. And they are bereft of the skills necessary to comprehend serious books and effectively marshal evidence and argument in written work."





Peter Berkowitz of the Hoover Institution at Stanford has written a damning article on the extent of liberal dominance within the University of California (and education in general) and the effect it has on students. It appeared in the Wall Street Journal. (Hat tip to Miggie and Latinosreadytovote.com)

http://latinosreadytovote.com/?p=1659



"The politicization of higher education by activist professors and compliant university administrators deprives students of the opportunity to acquire knowledge and refine their minds. It also erodes the nation's civic cohesion and its ability to preserve the institutions that undergird democracy in America.
So argues "A Crisis of Competence: The Corrupting Effect of Political Activism in the University of California," a new report by the California Association of Scholars, a division of the National Association of Scholars (NAS). The report is addressed to the Regents of the University of California, which has ultimate responsibility for governing the UC system, but the pathologies it diagnoses prevail throughout the country.
The analysis begins from a nonpolitical fact: Numerous studies of both the UC system and of higher education nationwide demonstrate that students who graduate from college are increasingly ignorant of history and literature. They are unfamiliar with the principles of American constitutional government. And they are bereft of the skills necessary to comprehend serious books and effectively marshal evidence and argument in written work.

Related Video

Hoover Institution fellow Peter Berkowitz on the politicization of higher education by activist professors.
This decline in the quality of education coincides with a profound transformation of the college curriculum. None of the nine general campuses in the UC system requires students to study the history and institutions of the United States. None requires students to study Western civilization, and on seven of the nine UC campuses, including Berkeley, a survey course in Western civilization is not even offered. In several English departments one can graduate without taking a course in Shakespeare. In many political science departments majors need not take a course in American politics.
Moreover, the evidence suggests that the hollowing of the curriculum stems from too many professors' preference for promoting a partisan political agenda.
National studies by Stanley Rothman in 1999, and by Neil Gross and Solon Simmons in 2007, have shown that universities' leftward tilt has become severe. And a 2005 study by Daniel Klein and Andrew Western in Academic Questions (a NAS publication) shows this is certainly true in California. For example, Democrats outnumbered Republicans four to one on University of California, Berkeley, professional school faculties; in the social sciences the ratio was approximately 21 to one.
The same 2005 study revealed that the Berkeley sociology department faculty was home to 17 Democrats and no Republicans. The political science department included 28 Democrats and two Republicans. The English department had 29 Democrats and one Republican; and the history department had 31 Democrats and one Republican.
While political affiliation alone need not carry classroom implications, the overwhelmingly left-leaning faculty openly declare the inculcation of progressive political ideas their pedagogical priority. As "A Crisis of Competence" notes, "a recent study by UCLA's prestigious Higher Education Research Institute found that more faculty now believe that they should teach their students to be agents of social change than believe that it is important to teach them the classics of Western civilization."
Some university programs tout their political presuppositions and objectives openly. The mission statements of the Women's Studies program at UCLA prejudges the issues by declaring that it proceeds from "the perspectives of those whose participation has been traditionally distorted, omitted, neglected, or denied." And the Critical Race Studies program at the UCLA School of law announces that its aim is to "transform racial justice advocacy."
Even the august American Association of University Professors—which in 1915 and 1940 published classic statements explaining that the aim of academic freedom was not to indoctrinate but to equip students to think for themselves—has sided with the politicized professoriate.
In 1915, the AAUP affirmed that in teaching controversial subjects a professor should "set forth justly without suppression or innuendo the divergent opinions of other investigators; he should cause his students to become familiar with the best published expressions of the great historic types of doctrine upon the questions at issue."
However, in recent statements on academic freedom in 2007 and 2011, the AAUP has undermined its almost century-old strictures against proselytizing. Its new position is that restricting professors to the use of relevant materials and obliging them to provide a reasonably comprehensive treatment of the subject represent unworkable requirements because relevance and comprehensiveness can themselves be controversial.
On the boundaries, they can be—like anything else. However, it is wrong to dismiss professors' duty to avoid introducing into classroom discussion opinions extraneous to the subject and to provide a well-rounded treatment of the matter under consideration. That opens the classroom to whatever professors wish to talk about. And in all too many cases what they wish to talk about in the classroom is the need to transform America in a progressive direction. Last year the leadership of AAUP officially endorsed the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Excluding from the curriculum those ideas that depart from the progressive agenda implicitly teaches students that conservative ideas are contemptible and unworthy of discussion. This exclusion, the California report points out, also harms progressives for the reason John Stuart Mill elaborated in his famous 1859 essay, "On Liberty": "He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that."
The removal of partisan advocacy from the classroom would have long-term political benefits. Liberal education equips students with intellectual skills valued by the marketplace. It prepares citizens to discharge civic responsibilities in an informed and deliberate manner. It fosters a common culture by revealing that much serious disagreement between progressives and conservatives revolves around differing interpretations of how to fulfill America's promise of individual freedom and equality.
It is certainly true that not all progressive professors intrude their politics into the classroom, but a culture of politicization has developed on campus in which department chairs and deans treat its occurrence as routine. "UC administrators," the California report sadly concludes, "far from performing their role as the university's quality control mechanism, now routinely function as the enablers, protectors, and even apologists for the politicized university and its degraded scholarly and educational standards."
In California, this is more than a failure of their duty as educators. It is also a violation of the law. Article IX, Section 9, of the California state constitution provides that "The university shall be entirely independent of all political or sectarian influence and kept free therefrom."
It is incumbent upon the UC Board of Regents, not to mention the governing bodies of other institutions of higher education across the country, to begin the long and arduous work of depoliticizing our universities and renewing liberal education."
Mr. Berkowitz is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and a member of the National Association of Scholars board of directors. "A Crisis of Competence" is posted at www.nas.org/images/documents/A_Crisis_of_Competence.pdf.
A version of this article appeared March 31, 2012, on page A13 in some U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: How California's Colleges Indoctrinate Students.

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 Fousesquawk comment: Has anybody sent this report to UC President Mark Yudof?



7 comments:

  1. Here is one letter to the editor on this article:

    "An academic study that reconfirms the left-wing bent of the curriculum and faculty of the University of California is not exactly breaking news ("How California's Colleges Indoctrinate Students" by Peter Berkowitz, op-ed, March 31). A conservative faculty member in the social sciences department of University of Californaia, Berkeley is as rare as a conservative reporter in the newsrooms of the broadcast networks or major daily newspapers. America's scholar-progressive complex is one that has presided over a 440% average tuition increase in the last 25 years, facilitated by more than a trillion dollars of outstanding student loans. Universities and professors benefit from funding by Washington, and professors in turn churn out left-wing activists and Democrats who vote to empower Washington.

    UC Berkeley students who majored in social welfare or ethnic or gender or peace and conflict studies are exposed to four years of victimization theology and graduate with skills that are not very marketable. As Mr. Berkowitz writes, many receive little or no insight into constitutional government, Western civilization or free-market economics. What a surprise when they graduate and discover that there is not a vibrant market for social-justice experts in the private economy. Educated victims with impaired critical-thinking skills are perfect instruments for engineering the fundamental transformation sought by their left-wing mentors."
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  2. Here is another letter to the editor on this article:

    "Mr. Berkowitz does a good job highlighting the failures to achieve balance in American education. I suggest that in the name of "social justice" we eliminate Latin-tagged honors at graduation in favor of a new system that confiscates all grade achievement from those with academic performance above a 2.8 GPA and redistributes it to those less fortunate in the graduating class. Why not launch all our students into the next phase of their careers understanding that disproportionate achievement is bad for society? While we are at it, we should also remove tenure and titles from faculty. They have no place given the differentiation they signify in a world designed with social justice in mind."

    The same basic logic that goes into share the wealth schemes can be applied to any endeavor.... with the same consequences.

    Facts are stubborn things and are only ignored or discounted by the unthinking but committed ideologues.
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  3. California students would be better served if they went to a community college for their first two years of higher education. they would probably get a better education and not indoctrination. My daughter experienced this last year in the UC system. I also think that a Harvard education is worthless, as I see Barack Obama step all over hiself when it comes to understanding the U.S. constitution. One wonders what he taught at the Chigo University. I understand that there are pictures on him teaxching the Saul Alinsky tactics to his students.

    Squid

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  4. http://www.sun-sentinel.com/florida-jewish-journal/florida-jewish-journal-eviction,0,192522.story

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  5. Hillary Clinton was the one who originally challenged the Obama self proclaimed title of "Law Professor."

    His formal title was "senior lecturer," but the University of Chicago Law School says he "served as a professor" and was "regarded as" a professor.

    Of course you would expect the Chicago University to give the most liberal interpretation for Obama about who was and who was not ACTUALLY a professor.

    I saw one of his former law students on TV who said that Obama only taught a course on the 14th Amendment that dealt primarily with equal protection of the laws.

    Obama's capability in constitutional law are equivalent to his capability of attempting to bring the Olympics to Chicago.
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  6. Anonymous,

    This will be posted. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  7. "I understand there are pictures of..."

    Apparently, whatever college Miggie went to didn't teach a course on standards of proof, or evidence.

    ReplyDelete