Our
best universities have forgotten that the reason they exist is to make minds,
not careers
Autor: William Deresiewicz*
Fuente: The American Scholar
It didn’t dawn on me that there might be a few holes
in my education until I was about 35. I’d just bought a house, the pipes needed
fixing, and the plumber was standing in my kitchen. There he was, a short,
beefy guy with a goatee and a Red Sox cap and a thick Boston accent, and I
suddenly learned that I didn’t have the slightest idea what to say to someone
like him. So alien was his experience to me, so unguessable his values, so
mysterious his very language, that I couldn’t succeed in engaging him in a few
minutes of small talk before he got down to work. Fourteen years of higher
education and a handful of Ivy League degrees, and there I was, stiff and
stupid, struck dumb by my own dumbness. “Ivy retardation”, a friend of mine
calls this. I could carry on conversations with people from other countries, in
other languages, but I couldn’t talk to the man who was standing in my own
house.
It’s not surprising that it took me so long to
discover the extent of my miseducation, because the last thing an elite
education will teach you is its own inadequacy. As two dozen years at Yale and
Columbia have shown me, elite colleges relentlessly encourage their students to
flatter themselves for being there, and for what being there can do for them.
The advantages of an elite education are indeed undeniable. You learn to think,
at least in certain ways, and you make the contacts needed to launch yourself
into a life rich in all of society’s most cherished rewards. To consider that
while some opportunities are being created, others are being cancelled and that
while some abilities are being developed, others are being crippled is, within
this context, not only outrageous, but inconceivable.
I’m not talking about curricula or the culture wars,
the closing or opening of the American mind, political correctness, canon
formation, or what have you. I’m talking about the whole system in which these
skirmishes play out. Not just the Ivy League and its peer institutions, but
also the mechanisms that get you there in the first place: the private and
affluent public “feeder” schools, the ever-growing parastructure of tutors and
test-prep courses and enrichment programs, the whole admissions frenzy and
everything that leads up to and away from it. The message, as always, is the
medium. Before, after, and around the elite college classroom, a constellation
of values is ceaselessly inculcated. As globalization sharpens economic
insecurity, we are increasingly committing ourselves—as students, as parents,
as a society—to a vast apparatus of educational advantage. With so many
resources devoted to the business of elite academics and so many people
scrambling for the limited space at the top of the ladder, it is worth asking
what exactly it is you get in the end—what it is we all get, because the elite
students of today, as their institutions never tire of reminding them, are the
leaders of tomorrow.
The first disadvantage of an elite education, as I
learned in my kitchen that day, is that it makes you incapable of talking to
people who aren’t like you. Elite schools
pride themselves on their diversity, but that diversity is almost entirely a
matter of ethnicity and race. With respect to class, these schools are
largely—indeed increasingly—homogeneous. Visit any elite campus in our great
nation and you can thrill to the heartwarming spectacle of the children of
white businesspeople and professionals studying and playing alongside the
children of black, Asian, and Latino businesspeople and professionals. At the
same time, because these schools tend to cultivate liberal attitudes, they
leave their students in the paradoxical position of wanting to advocate on
behalf of the working class while being unable to hold a simple conversation
with anyone in it. Witness the last two Democratic presidential nominees, Al
Gore and John Kerry: one each from Harvard and Yale, both earnest, decent,
intelligent men, both utterly incapable of communicating with the larger
electorate.
But it isn’t just a matter of class. My education
taught me to believe that people who didn’t go to an Ivy League or equivalent
school weren’t worth talking to, regardless of their class. I was given the
unmistakable message that such people were beneath me. We were “the best and
the brightest”, as these places love to say, and everyone else was, well,
something else: less good, less bright. I learned to give that little nod of
understanding, that slightly sympathetic “Oh”, when people told me they went to
a less prestigious college. (If I’d gone to Harvard, I would have learned to
say “in Boston” when I was asked where I went to school—the Cambridge version
of noblesse oblige). I never learned that
there are smart people who don’t go to elite colleges, often precisely for
reasons of class. I never learned
that there are smart people who don’t go to college at all.
I
also never learned that there are smart people who aren’t “smart”. The existence of multiple forms of intelligence has
become a commonplace, but however much elite universities like to sprinkle
their incoming classes with a few actors or violinists, they select for and
develop one form of intelligence: the analytic. While this is broadly true of
all universities, elite schools, precisely because their students (and faculty,
and administrators) possess this one form of intelligence to such a high
degree, are more apt to ignore the value of others. One naturally prizes what
one most possesses and what most makes for one’s advantages. But social intelligence and emotional
intelligence and creative ability, to name just three other forms, are not
distributed preferentially among the educational elite. The “best” are the
brightest only in one narrow sense. One needs to wander away from the
educational elite to begin to discover this.
What about people who aren’t bright in any sense? I
have a friend who went to an Ivy League college after graduating from a
typically mediocre public high school. One of the values of going to such a
school, she once said, is that it teaches you to relate to stupid people. Some
people are smart in the elite–college way, some are smart in other ways, and
some aren’t smart at all. It should be embarrassing not to know how to talk to
any of them, if only because talking to people is the only real way of knowing
them. Elite institutions are supposed to provide a humanistic education, but
the first principle of humanism is Terence’s: “nothing human is alien to me”. The first disadvantage of an elite education
is how very much of the human it alienates you from.
The
second disadvantage, implicit in what I’ve been saying, is that an elite
education inculcates a false sense of self-worth. Getting to an elite college, being at an elite
college, and going on from an elite college—all involve numerical rankings:
SAT, GPA, GRE. You learn to think of yourself in terms of those numbers. They
come to signify not only your fate, but your identity; not only your identity,
but your value. It’s been said that what those tests really measure is your
ability to take tests, but even if they measure something real, it is only a
small slice of the real. The problem begins when students are encouraged to forget
this truth, when academic excellence becomes excellence in some absolute sense,
when “better at X” becomes simply “better.”
There is nothing wrong with taking pride in one’s
intellect or knowledge. There is something wrong with the smugness and
self-congratulation that elite schools connive at from the moment the fat
envelopes come in the mail. From orientation to graduation, the message is
implicit in every tone of voice and tilt of the head, every old-school
tradition, every article in the student paper, every speech from the dean. The
message is: You have arrived. Welcome to the club. And the corollary is equally
clear: You deserve everything your presence here is going to enable you to get.
When people say that students at elite schools have a strong sense of
entitlement, they mean that those students think they deserve more than other
people because their SAT scores are higher.
At Yale, and no doubt at other places, the message is
reinforced in embarrassingly literal terms. The physical form of the
university—its quads and residential colleges, with their Gothic stone façades
and wrought-iron portals—is constituted by the locked gate set into the
encircling wall. Everyone carries around an ID card that determines which gates
they can enter. The gate, in other words, is a kind of governing
metaphor—because the social form of the university, as is true of every elite
school, is constituted the same way. Elite colleges are walled domains guarded
by locked gates, with admission granted only to the elect. The aptitude with
which students absorb this lesson is demonstrated by the avidity with which
they erect still more gates within those gates, special realms of ever-greater
exclusivity—at Yale, the famous secret societies, or as they should probably be
called, the open-secret societies, since true secrecy would defeat their
purpose. There’s no point in excluding people unless they know they’ve been
excluded.
One
of the great errors of an elite education, then, is that it teaches you to think
that measures of intelligence and academic achievement are measures of value in
some moral or metaphysical sense. But they’re not. Graduates of
elite schools are not more valuable than stupid people, or talentless people,
or even lazy people. Their pain does not hurt more. Their souls do not weigh
more. If I were religious, I would say, God does not love them more. The
political implications should be clear. As John Ruskin told an older elite,
grabbing what you can get isn’t any less wicked when you grab it with the power
of your brains than with the power of your fists. “Work must always be”, Ruskin
says, “and captains of work must always be… [But] there is a wide difference
between being captains…of work, and taking the profits of it”.
The political implications don’t stop there. An elite
education not only ushers you into the upper classes; it trains you for the
life you will lead once you get there. I didn’t understand this until I began
comparing my experience, and even more, my students’ experience, with the
experience of a friend of mine who went to Cleveland State. There are due dates
and attendance requirements at places like Yale, but no one takes them very
seriously. Extensions are available for the asking; threats to deduct credit
for missed classes are rarely, if ever, carried out. In other words, students
at places like Yale get an endless string of second chances. Not so at places
like Cleveland State. My friend once got a D in a class in which she’d been
running an A because she was coming off a waitressing shift and had to hand in
her term paper an hour late.
That may be an extreme example, but it is unthinkable
at an elite school. Just as unthinkably, she had no one to appeal to. Students
at places like Cleveland State, unlike those at places like Yale, don’t have a
platoon of advisers and tutors and deans to write out excuses for late work,
give them extra help when they need it, pick them up when they fall down. They
get their education wholesale, from an indifferent bureaucracy; it’s not handed
to them in individually wrapped packages by smiling clerks. There are few, if
any, opportunities for the kind of contacts I saw my students get
routinely—classes with visiting power brokers, dinners with foreign
dignitaries. There are also few, if any, of the kind of special funds that, at
places like Yale, are available in profusion: travel stipends, research
fellowships, performance grants. Each year, my department at Yale awards dozens
of cash prizes for everything from freshman essays to senior projects. This
year, those awards came to more than $90,000—in just one department.
Students at places like Cleveland State also don’t get
A-’s just for doing the work. There’s been a lot of handwringing lately over
grade inflation, and it is a scandal, but the most scandalous thing about it is
how uneven it’s been. Forty years ago, the average GPA at both public and
private universities was about 2.6, still close to the traditional B-/C+ curve.
Since then, it’s gone up everywhere, but not by anything like the same amount.
The average gpa at public universities is now about 3.0, a B; at private
universities it’s about 3.3, just short of a B+. And at most Ivy League
schools, it’s closer to 3.4. But there are always students who don’t do the work,
or who are taking a class far outside their field (for fun or to fulfill a
requirement), or who aren’t up to standard to begin with (athletes, legacies).
At a school like Yale, students who come to class and work hard expect nothing
less than an A-. And most of the time, they get it.
In
short, the way students are treated in college trains them for the social
position they will occupy once they get out. At schools like Cleveland State, they’re being
trained for positions somewhere in the middle of the class system, in the
depths of one bureaucracy or another. They’re being conditioned for lives with
few second chances, no extensions, little support, narrow opportunity—lives of
subordination, supervision, and control, lives of deadlines, not guidelines. At
places like Yale, of course, it’s the reverse. The elite like to think of
themselves as belonging to a meritocracy, but that’s true only up to a point.
Getting through the gate is very difficult, but once you’re in, there’s almost
nothing you can do to get kicked out. Not the most abject academic failure, not
the most heinous act of plagiarism, not even threatening a fellow student with
bodily harm—I’ve heard of all three—will get you expelled. The feeling is that,
by gosh, it just wouldn’t be fair—in other words, the self-protectiveness of
the old-boy network, even if it now includes girls. Elite schools nurture excellence, but they also nurture what a former
Yale graduate student I know calls “entitled mediocrity”. A is the mark of
excellence; A– is the mark of entitled mediocrity. It’s another one of those
metaphors, not so much a grade as a promise. It means, don’t worry, we’ll take
care of you. You may not be all that good, but you’re good enough.
Here, too, college reflects the way things work in the
adult world (unless it’s the other way around). For the elite, there’s always
another extension—a bailout, a pardon, a stint in rehab—always plenty of
contacts and special stipends—the country club, the conference, the year-end
bonus, the dividend. If Al Gore and John Kerry represent one of the
characteristic products of an elite education, George W. Bush represents
another. It’s no coincidence that our current president, the apotheosis of
entitled mediocrity, went to Yale. Entitled mediocrity is indeed the operating
principle of his administration, but as Enron and WorldCom and the other
scandals of the dot-com meltdown demonstrated, it’s also the operating
principle of corporate America. The fat
salaries paid to underperforming CEOs are an adult version of the A-.
Anyone who remembers the injured sanctimony with which Kenneth Lay greeted the
notion that he should be held accountable for his actions will understand the
mentality in question—the belief that once you’re in the club, you’ve got a
God-given right to stay in the club. But you don’t need to remember Ken Lay,
because the whole dynamic played out again last year in the case of Scooter
Libby, another Yale man.
If one of the disadvantages of an elite education is
the temptation it offers to mediocrity, another is the temptation it offers to
security. When parents explain why they work so hard to give their children the
best possible education, they invariably say it is because of the opportunities
it opens up. But what of the opportunities it shuts down? An elite education
gives you the chance to be rich—which is, after all, what we’re talking
about—but it takes away the chance not to be. Yet the opportunity not to be
rich is one of the greatest opportunities with which young Americans have been
blessed. We live in a society that is itself so wealthy that it can afford to
provide a decent living to whole classes of people who in other countries exist
(or in earlier times existed) on the brink of poverty or, at least, of
indignity. You can live comfortably in the United States as a schoolteacher, or
a community organizer, or a civil rights lawyer, or an artist—that is, by any
reasonable definition of comfort. You have to live in an ordinary house instead
of an apartment in Manhattan or a mansion in L.A.; you have to drive a Honda
instead of a BMW or a Hummer; you have to vacation in Florida instead of
Barbados or Paris, but what are such losses when set against the opportunity to
do work you believe in, work you’re suited for, work you love, every day of
your life?
Yet
it is precisely that opportunity that an elite education takes away. How can I be a
schoolteacher—wouldn’t that be a waste of my expensive education? Wouldn’t I be
squandering the opportunities my parents worked so hard to provide? What will
my friends think? How will I face my classmates at our 20th reunion, when
they’re all rich lawyers or important people in New York? And the question that
lies behind all these: Isn’t it beneath me? So a whole universe of possibility
closes, and you miss your true calling.
This is not to say that students from elite colleges
never pursue a riskier or less lucrative course after graduation, but even when
they do, they tend to give up more quickly than others. (Let’s not even talk
about the possibility of kids from privileged backgrounds not going to college
at all, or delaying matriculation for several years, because however
appropriate such choices might sometimes be, our rigid educational mentality
places them outside the universe of possibility—the reason so many kids go
sleepwalking off to college with no idea what they’re doing there). This
doesn’t seem to make sense, especially since students from elite schools tend
to graduate with less debt and are more likely to be able to float by on family
money for a while. I wasn’t aware of the phenomenon myself until I heard about
it from a couple of graduate students in my department, one from Yale, one from
Harvard. They were talking about trying to write poetry, how friends of theirs
from college called it quits within a year or two while people they know from
less prestigious schools are still at it. Why should this be? Because students from elite schools expect
success, and expect it now. They have, by definition, never experienced
anything else, and their sense of self has been built around their ability to
succeed. The idea of not being successful
terrifies them, disorients them, defeats them. They’ve been driven their
whole lives by a fear of failure—often, in the first instance, by their
parents’ fear of failure. The first time I blew a test, I walked out of the
room feeling like I no longer knew who I was. The second time, it was easier; I
had started to learn that failure isn’t the end of the world.
But
if you’re afraid to fail, you’re afraid to take risks, which begins to explain
the final and most damning disadvantage of an elite education: that it is profoundly anti-intellectual. This will
seem counterintuitive. Aren’t kids at elite schools the smartest ones around,
at least in the narrow academic sense? Don’t they work harder than anyone
else—indeed, harder than any previous generation? They are. They do. But being an intellectual is not the same as
being smart. Being an intellectual means more than doing your homework.
If so few kids come to college understanding this, it
is no wonder. They are products of a system that rarely asked them to think
about something bigger than the next assignment. The system forgot to teach
them, along the way to the prestige admissions and the lucrative jobs, that the
most important achievements can’t be measured by a letter or a number or a
name. It forgot that the true purpose of
education is to make minds, not careers.
Being
an intellectual means, first of all, being passionate about ideas—and not just
for the duration of a semester, for the sake of pleasing the teacher, or for
getting a good grade. A
friend who teaches at the University of Connecticut once complained to me that
his students don’t think for themselves. Well, I said, Yale students think for
themselves, but only because they know we want them to. I’ve had many wonderful
students at Yale and Columbia, bright, thoughtful, creative kids whom it’s been
a pleasure to talk with and learn from. But most of them have seemed content to
color within the lines that their education had marked out for them. Only a
small minority have seen their education as part of a larger intellectual
journey, have approached the work of the mind with a pilgrim soul. These few
have tended to feel like freaks, not least because they get so little support
from the university itself. Places like Yale, as one of them put it to me, are
not conducive to searchers.
Places like Yale are simply not set up to help
students ask the big questions. I don’t think there ever was a golden age of
intellectualism in the American university, but in the 19th century students
might at least have had a chance to hear such questions raised in chapel or in
the literary societies and debating clubs that flourished on campus. Throughout
much of the 20th century, with the growth of the humanistic ideal in American
colleges, students might have encountered the big questions in the classrooms
of professors possessed of a strong sense of pedagogic mission. Teachers like
that still exist in this country, but the increasingly dire exigencies of
academic professionalization have made them all but extinct at elite
universities. Professors at top research
institutions are valued exclusively for the quality of their scholarly work;
time spent on teaching is time lost. If students want a conversion
experience, they’re better off at a liberal arts college.
When elite universities boast that they teach their
students how to think, they mean that they teach them the analytic and
rhetorical skills necessary for success in law or medicine or science or
business. But a humanistic education is
supposed to mean something more than that, as universities still dimly feel.
So when students get to college, they hear a couple of speeches telling them to
ask the big questions, and when they graduate, they hear a couple more speeches
telling them to ask the big questions. And in between, they spend four years
taking courses that train them to ask the little questions—specialized courses,
taught by specialized professors, aimed at specialized students. Although the
notion of breadth is implicit in the very idea of a liberal arts education, the
admissions process increasingly selects for kids who have already begun to
think of themselves in specialized terms—the junior journalist, the budding
astronomer, the language prodigy. We are slouching, even at elite schools,
toward a glorified form of vocational training.
Indeed, that seems to be exactly what those schools
want. There’s a reason elite schools
speak of training leaders, not thinkers—holders of power, not its critics.
An independent mind is independent of all allegiances, and elite schools, which
get a large percentage of their budget from alumni giving, are strongly
invested in fostering institutional loyalty. As another friend, a
third-generation Yalie, says, the purpose of Yale College is to manufacture
Yale alumni. Of course, for the system to work, those alumni need money. At
Yale, the long-term drift of students away from majors in the humanities and
basic sciences toward more practical ones like computer science and economics
has been abetted by administrative indifference. The college career office has
little to say to students not interested in law, medicine, or business, and
elite universities are not going to do anything to discourage the large
percentage of their graduates who take their degrees to Wall Street. In fact,
they’re showing them the way. The liberal arts university is becoming the
corporate university, its center of gravity shifting to technical fields where scholarly
expertise can be parlayed into lucrative business opportunities.
It’s
no wonder that the few students who are passionate about ideas find themselves
feeling isolated and confused. I was talking with one of them last year about his interest in the
German Romantic idea of bildung, the upbuilding of the soul. But, he said—he
was a senior at the time—it’s hard to build your soul when everyone around you
is trying to sell theirs.
Yet there is a dimension of the intellectual life that
lies above the passion for ideas, though so thoroughly has our culture been
sanitized of it that it is hardly surprising if it was beyond the reach of even
my most alert students. Since the idea of the intellectual emerged in the 18th
century, it has had, at its core, a commitment to social transformation. Being an intellectual means thinking your
way toward a vision of the good society and then trying to realize that vision
by speaking truth to power. It means
going into spiritual exile. It means foreswearing your allegiance, in
lonely freedom, to God, to country, and to Yale. It takes more than just
intellect; it takes imagination and courage. “I am not afraid to make a mistake”,
Stephen Dedalus says, “even a great mistake, a lifelong mistake, and perhaps as
long as eternity, too”.
Being an intellectual begins with thinking your way
outside of your assumptions and the system that enforces them. But students who
get into elite schools are precisely the ones who have best learned to work
within the system, so it’s almost impossible for them to see outside it, to see
that it’s even there. Long before they got to college, they turned themselves
into world-class hoop-jumpers and teacher-pleasers, getting A’s in every class
no matter how boring they found the teacher or how pointless the subject,
racking up eight or 10 extracurricular activities no matter what else they
wanted to do with their time. Paradoxically, the situation may be better at
second-tier schools and, in particular, again, at liberal arts colleges than at
the most prestigious universities. Some students end up at second-tier schools
because they’re exactly like students at Harvard or Yale, only less gifted or
driven. But others end up there because they have a more independent spirit.
They didn’t get straight A’s because they couldn’t be bothered to give
everything in every class. They concentrated on the ones that meant the most to
them or on a single strong extracurricular passion or on projects that had
nothing to do with school or even with looking good on a college application.
Maybe they just sat in their room, reading a lot and writing in their journal.
These are the kinds of kids who are likely, once they get to college, to be
more interested in the human spirit than in school spirit, and to think about
leaving college bearing questions, not resumés.
I’ve been struck, during my time at Yale, by how
similar everyone looks. You hardly see any hippies or punks or art-school
types, and at a college that was known in the ’80s as the Gay Ivy, few out
lesbians and no gender queers. The geeks don’t look all that geeky; the
fashionable kids go in for understated elegance. Thirty-two flavors, all of
them vanilla. The most elite schools have become places of a narrow and
suffocating normalcy. Everyone feels pressure to maintain the kind of
appearance—and affect—that go with achievement. (Dress for success, medicate
for success.) I know from long experience as an adviser that not every Yale
student is appropriate and well-adjusted, which is exactly why it worries me
that so many of them act that way. The tyranny of the normal must be very heavy
in their lives. One consequence is that those who can’t get with the program
(and they tend to be students from poorer backgrounds) often polarize in the
opposite direction, flying off into extremes of disaffection and
self-destruction. But another consequence has to do with the large majority who
can get with the program.
I taught a class several years ago on the literature
of friendship. One day we were discussing Virginia Woolf’s novel The Waves,
which follows a group of friends from childhood to middle age. In high school,
one of them falls in love with another boy. He thinks, “To whom can I expose
the urgency of my own passion?…There is nobody—here among these grey arches,
and moaning pigeons, and cheerful games and tradition and emulation, all so
skilfully organised to prevent feeling alone”. A pretty good description of an
elite college campus, including the part about never being allowed to feel
alone. What did my students think of this, I wanted to know? What does it mean
to go to school at a place where you’re never alone? Well, one of them said, I
do feel uncomfortable sitting in my room by myself. Even when I have to write a
paper, I do it at a friend’s. That same day, as it happened, another student
gave a presentation on Emerson’s essay on friendship. Emerson says, he
reported, that one of the purposes of friendship is to equip you for solitude.
As I was asking my students what they thought that meant, one of them
interrupted to say, wait a second, why do you need solitude in the first place?
What can you do by yourself that you can’t do with a friend?
So there they were: one young person who had lost the
capacity for solitude and another who couldn’t see the point of it. There’s
been much talk of late about the loss of privacy, but equally calamitous is its
corollary, the loss of solitude. It used to be that you couldn’t always get
together with your friends even when you wanted to. Now that students are in
constant electronic contact, they never have trouble finding each other. But
it’s not as if their compulsive sociability is enabling them to develop deep
friendships. “To whom can I expose the urgency of my own passion?”: my student
was in her friend’s room writing a paper, not having a heart-to-heart. She
probably didn’t have the time; indeed, other students told me they found their
peers too busy for intimacy.
What happens when busyness and sociability leave no
room for solitude? The ability to engage in introspection, I put it to my
students that day, is the essential precondition for living an intellectual
life, and the essential precondition for introspection is solitude. They took
this in for a second, and then one of them said, with a dawning sense of
self-awareness, “So are you saying that we’re all just, like, really excellent
sheep?” Well, I don’t know. But I do know that the life of the mind is lived
one mind at a time: one solitary, skeptical, resistant mind at a time. The best
place to cultivate it is not within an educational system whose real purpose is
to reproduce the class system.
The world that produced John Kerry and George Bush is
indeed giving us our next generation of leaders. The kid who’s loading up on AP
courses junior year or editing three campus publications while double-majoring,
the kid whom everyone wants at their college or law school but no one wants in
their classroom, the kid who doesn’t have a minute to breathe, let alone think,
will soon be running a corporation or an institution or a government. She will
have many achievements but little experience, great success but no vision. The
disadvantage of an elite education is that it’s given us the elite we have, and
the elite we’re going to have.
William
Deresiewicz is an essayist and critic.
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