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- <text id=92TT0819>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Campus of The Future
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 54
- COVER STORIES
- Campus of The Future
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By the year 2000, American colleges and universities will be
- lean and mean, service oriented and science minded, multicultural
- and increasingly diverse--if they intend to survive their
- fiscal agony
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Jeanne
- Reid/Boston and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> If a fourth-grader could gaze into a crystal ball and
- envision the college world he or she will enter in the year
- 2000, it would reveal a mixture of the surprising and the
- familiar. Dormitories would probably have the same kinds of
- sagging mattresses, desks and bookshelves that have furnished
- collegiate rooms for generations. School pennants and posters
- would likely be smeared across the walls. But there might be
- special TV consoles--a few colleges have them now--that
- could beam up taped lectures by any professor on campus or even
- let students monitor courses from other schools. Built-in
- computer terminals, similar to ones in place at Dartmouth, could
- tap into the card catalogs of half the college libraries in the
- country, call up encyclopedia articles or scan the daily papers.
- A glance at the quad outside would show groups of teens in
- whatever uniform eventually supplants T shirts and blue jeans,
- but also many older students taking courses to change careers,
- and even retired couples returning to campus to satisfy their
- curiosity about everything from art history to zoology.
- </p>
- <p> There is, in fact, no need for a crystal ball to envision
- the university of the 21st century. Bit by logical bit, it is
- taking shape already on dozens of U.S. campuses as
- administrators begin to rethink their goals in light of a cost
- crunch that, recession or no, promises only to grow worse. From
- Kansas' Sterling College to Ohio's Youngstown State, from the
- huge State University of New York system (total enrollment: more
- than 369,000 on 23 campuses) to tiny Alaska Pacific University
- in Anchorage (639 students), officials are deciding not only how
- to do the same with less money but also how to do less with
- less.
- </p>
- <p> Budget deficits have led to a sharp drop in both state and
- federal funding; public colleges and universities, which had
- previously relied on tuition and legislative grants to pay the
- bills, now compete aggressively with private institutions for
- corporate and foundation grants. Even heavily endowed Ivy League
- schools are deferring maintenance and debating whether to lop
- off entire academic branches. Yale, for example, is considering
- a plan that would close its linguistics department and merge
- three branches of engineering into one; Columbia is abandoning
- its highly regarded library-science program. Still, the Ivies
- are doing better than the vast California State university
- system. San Diego State University stirred student anger by
- dropping 662 of 5,000 class sections and not rehiring 550
- part-time instructors last fall.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, critics of the academic establishment
- have raised sharp questions about whether U.S. colleges and
- universities, for all their reputed excellence, are giving good
- value for money, as tuitions rise faster than the inflation
- rate. One year at an elite private institution today costs
- $23,000; by the year 2000, the price could be as high as
- $40,000. Recent scandals, like the misallocation of federal
- research funds by Stanford and some other research-minded
- universities, have undermined academia's credibility with the
- public.
- </p>
- <p> In some respects, alma mater in Anno Domini 2000 will look
- pretty much the way she does now. "Madonna reinvents herself
- every season," is the dry observation of Sheldon Hackney,
- president of the University of Pennsylvania. "Universities are
- much more stable." Nonetheless, experts foresee quite a few
- changes--good as well as bad--for America's diverse complex
- of private and public institutions of higher learning. Items:
- </p>
- <p>-- The small liberal-arts school with a meager endowment
- and a largely local reputation is an "endangered species,"
- contends Diane Ravitch, an Assistant Secretary of Education. By
- the year 2000 some of these schools will have closed their doors
- or merged with larger, more stable schools. Meanwhile, new
- schools will open. Some will be two-year community colleges
- emphasizing service-oriented courses. Others may be small,
- publicly funded schools with innovative liberal-arts programs,
- like the University of South Florida's New College or Evergreen
- State College in Washington. And there will be much more
- intercollege cooperation, as neighboring schools share
- facilities and courses to avoid expensive and needless overlaps.
- The message: Cut costs, not throats.
- </p>
- <p>-- Curriculums will show some radical departures from the
- past. To justify their existence as servants of society, all
- schools will come under pressure to be less theoretical and more
- practical in preparing students for careers. There will be more
- emphasis on ethics as well as on science and technology,
- particularly in courses aimed not at those who intend to major
- in chemistry or engineering but at liberal-arts majors who need
- at least some scientific literacy. Students will be under
- pressure to take two foreign languages, and there will be a
- growing emphasis on Chinese, Japanese and Russian. Academia's
- international horizons will broaden in other ways. Instead of
- a comfy junior year abroad in Paris or Perugia, many
- undergraduates will opt for more adventurous and exotic locales--Eastern Europe, say, or Southeast Asia.
- </p>
- <p>-- Great research-oriented universities like Harvard and
- Michigan, the pride of higher learning in America, will probably
- stay at world-class levels. But both the elite giants and less
- prestigious schools will place a stronger emphasis on the
- quality of classroom teaching. Professors accustomed to thinking
- of research as their real work will be under pressure to spend
- time with first- and second-year undergraduates as institutions
- adapt to an increasingly diverse academic population--not just
- more women and minorities, but older students and part-timers
- with special needs. Even today, only 20% of the nation's
- undergraduates are young people between 18 and 22 who are
- pursuing a parent-financed education. Two-fifths of all students
- today are part-timers, and more than a third are over 25.
- </p>
- <p> Higher education in the U.S. is big business--a $100
- billion business, to be precise, representing 2.7% of gross
- national product. No other nation can boast of so many and such
- different institutions: 156 universities, 1,953 four-year
- colleges, 1,378 two-year colleges and technical schools. More
- than half these are defined as private schools (although nearly
- all get some form of state or federal funding). Collectively,
- they employ 793,000 faculty members--not to mention a
- supernumerary army of deans and other administrative personnel--and accommodate 14 million students. One sign of the
- astonishing increase in part-time students: only about 20% of
- these knowledge seekers annually receive one or more
- certificates of graduation, from A.A. (Associate of Arts) to
- Ph.D.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast to most other industrialized nations, the U.S.
- has no central government ministry imposing lockstep conditions
- on an untidy educational conglomerate. That is why so many
- schools are attempting to seize the future in strikingly
- independent ways. Take computers, for instance. At the
- University of California, Los Angeles, Egyptian-born senior
- professor Maha Ashour-Abis using the smart machines to teach
- physics to 140 students. The computers can simulate experiments,
- from sound waves being measured in a pool of water to a 3-D,
- multicolored representation of molecules colliding.
- </p>
- <p> Abdalla's course is part of a broader effort by UCLA
- administrators to perk up flagging student interest in the
- sciences. "We cannot afford to train everyone as a scientist,"
- says Clarence Hall, dean of physical sciences. "But there are
- hardly any students to teach. Science and engineering are the
- engine of economic progress, and without some changes, we are
- bound to lose the fuel for that engine."
- </p>
- <p> Ball State University in Muncie, Ind., has found a broader
- use for computers. Some 200 classrooms and laboratories have
- been wired with a fiber-optics video information system,
- complete with color monitors, that allows professors to tap into
- the school's library of films, videos and laser discs. Tony
- Edmonds, chairman of the history department, uses the system to
- teach a course on the Vietnam War. "Now I can discuss the My Lai
- massacre, press a button and show a two-minute segment on it,"
- he says. "I discuss the antiwar movement and pull up a segment
- on Abbie Hoffman." His undergraduates, children of the
- sound-bite era, take to the course like, well, MTV. "Of 105
- students only 10 got below a B," Edmonds says. "That's never
- happened before."
- </p>
- <p> Next year Edmonds' Vietnam course will be transmitted to
- 20 off-campus sites around the state. And what about the guest
- lecturer who was grounded in Chicago by a snowstorm? No
- problem: out-of-town speakers can visit an interactive TV studio
- and get beamed directly into a Ball State classroom.
- </p>
- <p> Just as more and more computer-wise workers will earn
- their keep from home offices, a growing number of students can
- expect to get their degrees without ever setting foot on campus.
- Susan Lerner, 40, of Burnt Ranch, Calif., is doing so now. An
- elementary school teacher at a remote Hupa Indian reservation,
- she has enrolled in a new M.A. program in educational technology
- offered by George Washington University in Washington, 2,500
- miles away. Lerner takes two four-hour courses a week, beamed
- to her via the satellite dish in her yard, and keeps in touch
- with her professors through her computer's electronic bulletin
- board. "I want to integrate the use of technology in rural
- areas," says Lerner, who expects to get her degree in two years.
- "With a modem we can be connected to the rest of the world. With
- interactive video, we can offer opportunities that people in
- these areas don't ordinarily have."
- </p>
- <p> Anticipating a surge in "distance learning," cable
- entrepreneur Glenn Jones in 1987 founded the Mind Extension
- University. Based in Englewood, Colo., it beams college-credit
- courses to 36,000 students across the country, under the aegis
- of such established institutions as the University of Minnesota
- and Penn State. Last fall a branch of the University of Maryland
- began offering the nation's first four-year bachelor of arts
- program via Mind Extension; 60 students are enrolled. "Today's
- students are often working," explains Paul Hamlin, the Maryland
- dean in charge of the program. "They need to be able to compete,
- and they want a flexible format. Because of time constraints--children, jobs, commutes--they can't go to the typical
- campus."
- </p>
- <p> It's not only the students who have changing needs. So do
- the various communities that colleges and universities are
- trying to serve. Inside what was once the ivory tower, there is
- a growing interest in new kinds of alliances with business. In
- St. Louis, Washington University and Monsanto Co. have linked
- up in biomedical research projects involving proteins and
- peptides, as part of a search for more sophisticated drugs. On
- the campus of the University of California, Irvine, Hitachi has
- built a high-tech research lab, which it shares with U.C.'s
- top-flight biochemistry department. Critics worry about the
- ethics of this cozy arrangement, despite strict
- conflict-of-interest rules drawn up by the university. "What
- forms of industrial cohabitation should a state-funded
- university permit?" asks Michael Schrage, a research affiliate
- at M.I.T. "It's one thing for a campus to encourage private
- industry to participate in research. It is quite another to have
- facilities that blur the line between private and proprietary."
- </p>
- <p> Similar questions have been asked about the efforts of
- some publicly funded schools to justify their existence by
- trying to fulfill immediate community needs. The University of
- New Hampshire has been able to squeeze additional funds from
- New Hampshire's traditionally tight-fisted legislature by
- polishing its public image with projects like developing a
- non-toxic bacterium that virtually eliminated black flies, which
- plagued some of the state's tourist resorts. But the
- university's president, Dale Nitzschke, allows that catering to
- the lawmakers' whims is a high-risk proposition. "We don't enjoy
- a separation anymore between the university and the political
- system," he says. "It is critical that we don't become pawns of
- the government, the legislature or business and industry. If we
- lose our autonomy, we've lost the ball game."
- </p>
- <p> During the great expansion that took place after World War
- II, American colleges and universities sought to be all things
- to all people. In the new age of austerity, schools are being
- forced to rethink their missions, decide what they can do best
- and--in a form of academic triage--abandon certain fields
- of learning to others. Rice University in Houston has often
- been called "the Harvard of the South" (although these days the
- motto should be reversed, claims its president, George Rupp).
- Rice has flourished by trying to recruit National Merit
- scholars, who constitute 40% of the class of 1995, and by
- developing a national reputation for superb teaching in the
- sciences and social sciences.
- </p>
- <p> It is fairly common these days for neighboring colleges to
- share talents and facilities, particularly in arcane
- specialties. For example, one-third of the graduate students in
- a cognitive-psychology class at Carnegie-Mellon University are
- actually enrolled at the nearby University of Pittsburgh. Many
- experts believe that much more can be done to eliminate overlap.
- "Worcester County in Massachusetts has at least five colleges,"
- says Arnold Hiatt, chairman of the Stride Rite Corp. and a
- member of that state's Higher Education Coordinating Council.
- "If one has an outstanding physics department, it would make
- sense for the other four to phase out physics and build their
- own strengths."
- </p>
- <p> What if three schools in Maine decided to offer more
- courses on Eastern Europe? Harvard sociologist David Riesman has
- a proposal: "I can imagine Colby, Bates and Bowdoin, for
- example, deciding that one would concentrate on Romania, one on
- Bulgaria and one on Czechoslovakia. They could have
- interchangeable programs that all students could use for
- semesters abroad."
- </p>
- <p> But institutions need not always be neighbors to
- collaborate fruitfully. Last month American University signed
- an agreement with Japan's Ritseumeikan University to offer a
- joint master's degree in international relations from both
- schools. "Students would spend one year in Washington, D.C., and
- one year in Kyoto," explains A.U. president Joseph Duffey, who
- wants to set up a similar program in business administration.
- </p>
- <p> Many colleges, in the era of permanent retrenchment, will
- have to offer a narrower range of courses than in the past. But
- this does not necessarily mean intellectual deprivation. John
- Silber, the acerbic and outspoken president of Boston
- University, complains that he has seen "an increasing number of
- too small classes and too many courses. We have about 150
- courses that study the human mind. But all that we know about
- the human mind could be taught in 30. A course on the effect of
- Anna on Sigmund Freud is fine. But it's part of the waste that
- is commonplace at big research universities. Small colleges
- cannot afford that kind of narcissism."
- </p>
- <p> So what is the alternative? One answer is offered by
- Adelphi University, on New York's Long Island, which was on the
- verge of bankruptcy when Peter Diamandopoulos was named
- president seven years ago. His strategy: trim fat by linking
- Adelphi's professional schools, notably in business, social work
- and nursing, with its undergraduate studies and by introducing
- an imaginative core curriculum that encompasses ethics as well
- as arts and sciences. One part of the curriculum deals with "the
- nature of modernity" and ranges from war and economic
- development to breakthroughs in technology.
- </p>
- <p> For better or worse, many experts believe that the battle
- over what is commonly called multiculturalism is winding down.
- That is, there is an emerging consensus that every curriculum
- needs broadening to encompass the cultural experience of women
- and minorities--but not at the denigration of D.W.M.s (Dead
- White Males). Robert Wood, who is Henry Luce professor of
- Democratic Institutions and the Social Order at Wesleyan
- University, argues for balance. "In the past five years, we have
- generally had two counsels on curriculum, and they're both
- wrong. Allan Bloom [The Closing of the American Mind] and
- others basically say, `Don't read anything after the Age of the
- Enlightenment.' Then we have our present multicultural movement
- saying every culture should be explored. We need some consensus
- on this. What we should do is concentrate on how to train
- competent Americans."
- </p>
- <p> And how should colleges do that? Wood has a three-part
- program. "We've got to teach economics to every student. It
- conveys a rigor and quantitative skill that all students should
- understand before they look at political or social institutions.
- We should require the study of communications, especially visual
- ones, and not just with some tired old journalist teaching
- students how the front page is put together. And third, we need
- to offer real science courses to the non-science student. Most
- hard scientists tend to belittle non-majors, assuming them to
- be cognitively inferior. The teachers keep on doing what they're
- trained to do, expecting the non-majors to sink or swim."
- </p>
- <p> Wood is also concerned, as are many other educators, about
- the problem of attracting--and keeping--minority students.
- According to the Congressional Budget Office, blacks and
- Hispanics were only half as likely as whites to have completed
- four or more years of college in 1990. Probably no school has
- given more thought to the problem than Occidental College of Los
- Angeles, where 44% of this year's first-year class is nonwhite.
- President John B. Slaughter, who is black, believes many
- nonwhites need a kind of social and cultural head start to
- prepare them for college life. He strongly supports a program
- begun by his predecessor that invites about 50 "students of
- color" to spend five weeks of the summer on campus, prior to
- their enrollment. There is some course work but also reassurance
- that they are not alone in a potentially threatening,
- predominantly white environment. "I would have felt very
- alienated without the summer program," recalls senior Diana
- Hong, who is Hispanic. "You start school with 49 friends."
- </p>
- <p> Academia's code word for the future, in the view of some,
- is "accountability"--both to the students it hopes to serve
- and the public that pays the bills, either by taxes, tuition or
- gifts. In Hiatt's view, "too many higher education institutions
- have been run like government, and that means they have been run
- badly." One inevitable consequence of imitating or emulating
- government has been bureaucratic bloat: a self-perpetuating
- nomenklatura of assistant deans, development officers and other
- office-bound personnel. "Harvard doesn't have a financial
- problem, it has a management problem," contends B.U.'s Silber.
- </p>
- <p> Some innovative schools--Rice among them--have chosen
- to dismantle their bureaucracies to devote more resources to
- labs, libraries and classrooms. "Higher education has to see
- itself as having an enhanced obligation to society and the
- community," says Arthur Hauptman, a Washington-based educational
- consultant. Ernest Boyer, head of the Carnegie Foundation for
- the Advancement of Teaching, is even blunter. "Universities and
- colleges," he warns, "will be either engaged or judged
- irrelevant." To measure by its noble past and present
- accomplishments--even amid fiscal agony--odds are strong
- that higher learning in America will find a way to compete and
- survive. Like Fortune's annual list of the 500 top U.S.
- industrial corporations, the pecking order of academic
- excellence is bound to see eventual changes. But too much is at
- stake, in pride and passion, for the entire empire of academia
- to fall ignobly into mediocrity, somnolence and sloth.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-