{"id":17948,"date":"2012-08-22T20:32:11","date_gmt":"2012-08-22T20:32:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/local.pdt\/2012\/08\/the-true-purposes-of-higher-education-and-the-emerging-role-of-fraternities-in-accomplishing-those-purposes\/"},"modified":"2023-12-08T20:02:38","modified_gmt":"2023-12-08T20:02:38","slug":"the-true-purposes-of-higher-education-and-the-emerging-role-of-fraternities-in-accomplishing-those-purposes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/phideltatheta.org\/news-stories\/the-true-purposes-of-higher-education-and-the-emerging-role-of-fraternities-in-accomplishing-those-purposes\/","title":{"rendered":"The True Purposes of Higher Education and the Emerging Role of Fraternities in Accomplishing Those Purposes"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

By Dr. Donald Eastman – President, Eckerd Colllege<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

As delivered by Dr. Eastman at the 2012 Kleberg Emerging Leaders Institute<\/em>
<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

I am delighted to be with you tonight \u2013 and I hope perhaps to stimulate your thinking about both the true purposes of higher education and the emerging role of fraternities in accomplishing those purposes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

My remarks will be relatively brief, for two reasons:  First, I simply want to kindle your thinking about this topic, not to do it all for you.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Second, recent findings from cognitive research show that after 9.6 minutes of listening to a talk, the old guys begin to nod off and the young guys begin to engage in sexual fantasy \u2013 and I want to keep both of these responses under control.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Just so you know where I am coming from, let me say this:  I graduated from college in 1968, a time in which my classmates were being drafted to fight and die in Vietnam, a war I opposed from the start.  My university and the country were still essentially segregated, and our school days were full of demonstrations and chanting and marches and civic disobedience and, occasionally, violence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

But my fraternity chapter provided diversity, debate, affection, and opportunities for thoughtful discussion and leadership that made a great difference in my life, then and now, and it has provided enduring friendships that are still strong.  I am here tonight because I hope your experience is and will continue to be as rich and rewarding as mine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

As you know, these are tough times for American higher education \u2013 particularly public education.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

State governments all across the country have cut their universities\u2019 budgets again and again over the past decade:  In Florida, public university support is now 40% less than it was five years ago.  In many, if not most states, support for public higher education is often a lot less than it was ten years ago, and both tuition and enrollment have continued to increase, often dramatically.  And, of course, many of these states were not funding higher education at an adequate level before they began these dramatic cutbacks.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Everybody wants colleges and universities to, in Senator Lamar Alexander\u2019s words, \u201ccut costs, reduce tuition, and improve quality.\u201d And politicians across the political spectrum have ideas about how to do that.  Senator Alexander, for example, former Governor of Tennessee and Secretary of the Department of Education, has frequently touted the benefits of a three-year degree program. Others talk about saving money through  more accountability, larger classes, more part-time and non-tenured faculty, fewer on-campus amenities, and particularly what so many pundits  and politicians and trustees think is the magic potion to control costs \u2013 on-line courses.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

It is now almost universally accepted that on-line learning is just as effective as live classrooms with live professors, a whole lot less expensive, and inevitable. This idea has, of course, received widespread financial support from such icons as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, among others, and has been embraced by politicians and trustees who believe the failure to board the on-line train is evidence of professional protectionism by college faculty and administrators.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Perhaps you read about this exact scenario playing out last month at the University of Virginia, one of the world\u2019s great public universities, when the Board of Trustees fired the president for being reluctant to demand that the faculty substitute on-line courses for their classroom teaching.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

While UVA\u2019s fiasco has been at least temporarily resolved, these battles are being fought in every state in the country, and the stakes for the form and support of higher education in America are very high.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

At the same time, however, both private and public colleges and universities are enrolling more students than ever, and clearly people are paying higher prices than ever.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

I understand the frustrations of politicians and parents and students about college prices and the inclinations of some of them to propose quick fixes.  But for a first-rate college education, such fixes are not readily available:  Despite the financial benefits, traditionally-aged students do not want to graduate from college in three years.  They do not sign up for on-line courses if they can help it.  They do not like large classes.  They are frustrated by part-time faculty and courses taught by graduate students. (By the way, it is estimated that 70% or more of the undergraduate courses now offered at major public universities are taught by graduate students and temporary or part-time faculty.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The unhappy truth is this:  It still takes just as many people to play a Mozart quintet (that would be five) in 2012 as when it was first played in 1780.  There has been no improvement in efficiency in the intervening 230 years, nor is there likely to be any.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

You could, of course, omit an instrument or two, a violin here, a clarinet there \u2013 who would know? Well, those who know Mozart\u2019s music would know. They wouldn\u2019t think it was simply bad; they would think it wasn\u2019t Mozart. And they would be right.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In the same way, most of our courses in higher education still require the same things Socrates required \u2013 an instructor, students, and a gathering place \u2013 actual or virtual. These elements are pretty much essential, if you are going to do it right.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The diminished funding of higher education is a bad thing for a lot of reasons \u2013 but the most important is that our future as the freest, most prosperous country on earth depends on it. Thomas Jefferson made this very point when he founded the University of Virginia 200 years ago. There is no question that the United States has both the best universities in the world and the best system of higher education in the world.  Senator Alexander says that the greatness of our colleges and universities is largely the result of three things:  the $100 billion a year in federal financial aid that supports need-based aid and loans; the $30 billion a year in federal research funding, mostly through the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense; and our long American tradition of institutional autonomy. Unlike most countries in the world, we have almost no national colleges or universities, except for the five service academies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Now, in the context of the state, national and world-wide economic downturn, which may not show great improvement for decades to come, undergraduates at American universities \u2013 especially public universities \u2013 are in a particularly difficult situation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

For public universities, educating undergraduates is only one of the many things they do, some of which are much more consequential to many of their constituents than undergraduate education.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Let me give you just four examples of those \u201cother businesses.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n