Open to Difference

In my last post, I discussed a shift in the dialogue occurring at colleges and universities across the country, or in more specific terms the decline in and avoidance of open dialogue.  This is the first in a series of subsequent posts where I attempt to dive deeper in this idea, and my call for a return to open dialogue and an acceptance of diverse thought and opinion. The first step in this journey is an examination of some historical views on the role of education.

The principles underlying modern thought on the role of education in a democratic society can be traced to some of the earliest writing concerning education in America.  Scholars such as Walter Feinberg tell us that some of the earliest goals of education were the promotion of a common national identity that reinforced and reproduced existing social structures.  However, as cultural diversity grew and civil rights took hold across the country, educational institutions had to adapt to a new social paradigm.  The old ideas proved problematic and inequities continued.

In order to promote a sense of shared belonging, James Stillwagon found that schools needed to educate students on 3 tenets: 1) citizenship is shared by members of different cultural groups; 2) citizens are expected to show partiality to their nation and fellow citizens; 3) citizens from different cultural groups are expected to be partial to each other even if they must distance themselves from members of their cultural group from a different nation.  But how did we get here?

One of our nation’s founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson, believed that it was possible for individuals to improve themselves through education.  It was his belief that all people are born with a set of innate abilities and sense of moral values.  As such, he recognized the role of institutions of education to help form a person’s character, and therefore believed that only those with extraordinary ability and wisdom should receive the necessary education to do so.  Horace Mann extended on Jefferson’s ideas and argued that all should have equality of opportunity in order to promote democracy.  Ultimately, Dewey had the largest impact on providing a broad, non-individualistic view through equal opportunity.  In addition, he saw education as being the foundation for effective citizenship; more so citizenship in a diverse society, including diversity of belief.

To move to a more contemporary perspective, Amy Guttman based her position largely on Dewey’s ideas and the concept of negative liberty, i.e. free from domination or coercion.  This means she perceives the role of education promoting democratic values by promoting and supporting students’ exploration of their own values and to have freedom from ideological repression.  Colleges and universities are meant to defend the individual’s rights to free and autonomous self-creation, and in so doing they support a continued free and democratic state.

How is it that colleges and universities accomplish this feat?  Sharon Fraser-Burgess posited it can be accomplished by simply allowing the free and open dialogue and using this as an opportunity to educate the citizenry on the skills and virtues of open democratic deliberation; to continually construct the moral substance dictated by the virtues of a moral deliberative democracy.  The enforcement of a single ideal through education only subverts contemporary democratic ideals.  Educational institutions must be free from constraint if they are to preserve the intellectual and social foundations of a deliberative democracy.

Lost Ideas

I had a hard time thinking about the next topic to write.  No, not because I had nothing to say – believe me that is NOT a problem (ask anyone who knows me!).  Actually, I had a hard time picking a topic.  The topic I landed on is one that I hold very close professionally.  It is something that I focus on every day at work.  Ask yourself this, what is the purpose of higher education?

Obviously, this is not something I am going to attempt to explore in a single post.  I say explore because different views exist on this question.  Instead, what I want to do is share why this question is, or at least should be, so pervasive today.  I will follow up with additional posts where I explore this idea in more depth.

If you are like me and follow higher education in the news (yes – this is a thing) you understand why I say this.  If not, keep reading.  Actually, everyone please keep reading!

So, where to start? Before I begin, please, please, please know that to me this topic is completely apolitical.  I believe it has become wrongly politicized. I have been in higher education for about 12 years now, and an administrator for a good portion of that time.  When I began my career in higher education, I was certain that my role as a faculty member, and later an administrator, was and still is to protect and promote the rigor, integrity, and freedom of voice and thought that academia represents.  This does not mean allowing a single perspective or political view (remember, to me this idea is apolitical) to be presented to the detriment of others.  Rather, it means allowing all perspectives to be shared in the public space that is academia.

Yes, that’s right, in order to promote freedom of voice and thought, I believe that the role of higher education is to protect and defend the rights of all people to freely share their ideas, not silence those that we disagree with.  What are our options then?  We, as academicians, are to use our expertise to provide evidence that supports and refutes the ideas presented to help educate the broader citizenry.  Notice, I didn’t say that our role was to provide value judgments to the broader citizenry.  Rather, we as experts in our own fields should guide the citizenry through the cognitive dissonance that conflicting ideas present and help them to arrive at THEIR own value judgements.

Unfortunately, that is not what has been occurring in the past few years.  Instead, we see protests on both the left and the right to silence opposing viewpoints rather than promoting meaningful dialogue to arrive at mutual understanding (this does not necessarily mean agreement!).    Schools are removing conservative philosophers from the reading lists, removing the idea of liberal from the liberal arts, and on and on.  How is this freedom of thought?  How does this promote dialogue?  When does it stop becoming education and turn into brainwashing?

My impression from the current news is that my ideas on this topic put me in the minority in academia, and if so, that’s OK.  Let’s dialogue.  I hope you will join me over my next few posts as I present the philosophies and research that support my thinking and align my ideas with the tenets of supporting a free democracy.  Over the next few posts, we will explore concepts in history, liberalism, human capital theory, and human capabilities that, I believe, will support my call for a return to broader dialogue in higher education.