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- <text id=92TT0780>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: The Pursuit of Excellence
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 59
- COVER STORIES
- The Pursuit of Excellence
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For all their abiding troubles, U.S. universities and colleges
- are a powerful magnet for foreign students in search of freedom
- and diversity
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--With reporting by Ann Blackman/Washington,
- Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn and Sidney Urquhart/New York
- </p>
- <p> Sometime around the seventh grade, many American students
- are introduced to the tale of 10 blind men inspecting an
- elephant. When each blind man reaches different conclusions
- about the creature, the students are invited to consider whether
- truth is absolute or lies in the eye of the beholder. College
- professors and administrators might want to remember that fable
- when they take the measure of American higher education. Many
- of them, who tend to see only what they stand to lose, perceive
- the beast as wounded, suffering from the shocks of rising costs,
- dwindling resources and life-draining cutbacks. But foreigners,
- who compare America's universities with their own, often reach
- very different conclusions about the nature of the beast.
- </p>
- <p> If sheer numbers provide any proof, America's universities
- and colleges are the envy of the world. For all their abiding
- troubles, this country's 3,500 institutions were flooded with
- 407,530 students from 193 different countries last year. Asia
- led the way with 39,600 students from China and 36,610 from
- Japan, followed by India and Canada. Many of the foreigners, who
- entered graduate and undergraduate programs in roughly equal
- numbers, felt they had to go abroad to escape narrow and
- restrictive systems at home. They came in search of academic
- excellence certainly, but they also came looking for freedom,
- diversity and the cachet that an American degree continues to
- provide.
- </p>
- <p> Some students come simply because they are shut out of the
- system at home. Most European and Asian universities provide an
- elite service to a small and privileged clientele. While fully
- 60% of all U.S. high school graduates attend college at some
- point in their life, just 30% of the comparable German
- population, 28% of the French, 20% of the British and 37% of the
- Japanese proceed beyond high school. German students who survive
- the Abitur or Britons who pass their A levels may still not
- qualify for a top university at home, but find American
- universities far more welcoming. Some U.S. schools acknowledge
- the rigor of European secondary training and will give up to a
- year's credit to foreigners who have passed their high school
- exams.
- </p>
- <p> "The egalitarian conception that everyone has a right to
- an education appropriate to his potential is a highly
- democratic and compassionate standard," says Marvin Bressler,
- professor of sociology and education specialist at Princeton
- University. True, not all U.S. collegians can match the
- performance of their foreign counterparts, but American
- institutions do offer students from rich and poor families alike
- the chance to realize their full potential. "America educates
- so many more people at university that one can't expect all
- those who go to be either as well informed or intelligent as the
- much narrower band who go to English universities," says Briton
- Christopher Ricks, professor of English at Boston University.
- Having instructed at Cambridge, Ricks knows that teaching T.S.
- Eliot to British undergraduates is an easier task. Yet he finds
- teaching at B.U. very rewarding. "I'm not against elitism," he
- says. "But I happen to like having people who are more eager to
- learn."
- </p>
- <p> The democratic impulse to reach out to so many first took
- seed after World War II, when the G.I. bill made funding for
- higher education available to all returning soldiers. As
- universities expanded to handle the sudden influx, they
- developed the flexibility that has become one of the hallmarks
- of American higher learning. "In the U.S. there is a system of
- infinite chances," says Diane Ravitch, Assistant Secretary of
- Education. "At 35, you can decide to go back to college, upgrade
- your education, change your profession."
- </p>
- <p> While Americans take such flexibility for granted,
- foreigners do not. To French students, who are commonly expected
- at age 16 to select both a university and a specific course of
- study, the American practice of jumping not only from department
- to department but also from school to school seems a luxury.
- Japanese students find it all but impossible to transfer credits
- from one school to another. Thus students who initially enter
- a junior college and subsequently decide to earn a bachelor's
- degree must head overseas.
- </p>
- <p> Many are attracted not only to the academic programs at a
- particular U.S. college but also to the larger community, which
- affords the chance to soak up the surrounding culture. Few
- foreign universities put much emphasis on the cozy communal life
- that characterizes American campuses: from clubs and sports
- teams to student publications and theatrical societies. "The
- campus and the American university have become identical in
- people's minds," says Brown University President Vartan
- Gregorian. "In America it is assumed that a student's daily life
- is as important as his learning experience."
- </p>
- <p> While curfews and dorm-visitation rules have long been
- relaxed, university administrators and staff members still
- perform an in loco parentis role. They are expected to provide
- counseling and supervision on everything from career and family
- planning to the dietary habits of vegetarians and anorexics.
- Indeed, such painstaking attention is paid to the personal needs
- of students that Gregorian likens running a U.S. college to
- presiding over a Greek city-state. "You have your security
- force, your dormitories, your food services, a judiciary to
- impose discipline, whether somebody harassed somebody, and so
- forth," he says. "I can't imagine the president of the Sorbonne
- being bothered with these things."
- </p>
- <p> Foreign students also come in search of choices. America's
- menu of options--research universities, state institutions,
- private liberal-arts schools, community colleges, religious
- institutions, military academies--is unrivaled. "In Europe,"
- says history professor Jonathan Steinberg, who has taught at
- both Harvard and Cambridge, "there is one system, and that is
- it." While students overseas usually must demonstrate expertise
- in a single field, whether law or philosophy or chemistry, most
- American universities insist that students sample natural and
- social sciences, languages and literature before choosing a
- field of concentration.
- </p>
- <p> Such opposing philosophies grow out of different
- traditions and power structures. In Europe and Japan
- universities are answerable only to a Ministry of Education,
- which sets academic standards and distributes money. While
- centralization ensures that all students are equipped with
- roughly the same resources and perform at roughly the same
- level, it also discourages experimentation. "When they make
- mistakes, they make big ones," says Robert Rosenzweig, president
- of the Association of American Universities. "They set a system
- in wrong directions, and it's like steering a supertanker."
- </p>
- <p> U.S. colleges, on the other hand, are so responsive to
- cultural currents that they are often on the cutting edge of
- social change. Such sensitivity--some might argue
- hypersensitivity--to the culture around them reflects the
- broad array of constituencies to which college administrators
- must answer. The board of trustees, composed of community and
- national leaders, serves as a referee between the institutional
- culture and the surrounding community; alumni and corporate
- donors, who often earmark monies for specific expenditures;
- student bodies that demand a voice in university life;
- legislators who apportion government funds; and an often feisty
- faculty.
- </p>
- <p> Smaller colleges are particularly attractive to foreign
- students because they are likely to offer direct contact with
- professors. "We have one of the few systems in the world where
- students are actually expected to go to class," says Rosenzweig.
- With the exception of Britain, where much of the teaching takes
- place in one-on-one tutorials, European students rarely come
- into direct contact with professors until they reach
- graduate-level studies. Even lectures are optional in Europe,
- since students are graded solely on examinations, with no eye
- to class attendance or participation. In Japan students are
- expected to ingest their professors' teachings so passively that
- it is possible for a student to graduate without ever opening
- his mouth.
- </p>
- <p> In some respects, the independent spirit of the American
- university that foreigners admire comes down to dollars and
- cents. All U.S. colleges, private and public alike, must fight
- vigorously to stay alive. They compete not only for students but
- also for faculty and research grants. Such competition, though
- draining and distracting, can stimulate creativity and force
- administrators to remain attentive to student needs. "U.S.
- students pay for their education," says Ulrich Littmann, head
- of the German Fulbright Commission, "and demand a commensurate
- value for what they--or their parents--pay."
- </p>
- <p> Most universities abroad have state funding, but that
- luxury has a steep price: universities have less opportunity to
- develop distinctive personalities and define their own missions.
- "There isn't a lot of competition or innovation in Japanese
- higher education because there's too much government control,"
- says Nana Regur, an international-education specialist.
- </p>
- <p> If the financial crisis besetting U.S. campuses is
- mishandled, Americans may discover they don't know what they've
- got until it's gone. "By the year 2000, American higher
- education will no longer be dominant in the world," warns Joseph
- Duffey, president of American University in Washington. "Our
- general belief in education and our ability to finance it are
- running out." Unless real corrections are made--and fast--the U.S. will relinquish its standing as the most desirable
- place in the world to get a higher education.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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