Sustainable, resilient, free : the future of public higher education / John Warner.
Publisher: Cleveland, OH : Belt Publishing, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Edition: First editionDescription: 207 pages : illustrations ; 19 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1948742950
- 9781948742955
- 378.3/80973 23
- LA227.4 .W37 2020
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | LA227.4 .W37 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001499648 |
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LA227.4 .S46 2013 College (un)bound : the future of higher education and what it means for students / | LA227.4 .S95 2016 Fail U. : the false promise of higher education / | LA227.4 .T545 2007 New players, different game : understanding the rise of for-profit colleges and universities / | LA227.4 .W37 2020 Sustainable, resilient, free : the future of public higher education / | LA228 .C66 The citadel of learning. | LA229 .B24 2012 What the best college students do / | LA229 .D35 2001 The conscience of the campus : case studies in moral reasoning among today's college students / |
Includes bibliographical references.
In 1983, U.S. News and World Report started to rank colleges and universities, throwing them into competition with each other for students and precious resources. Over the course of the next thirty or so years, everything fell apart. A Reagan-era ethos of privatization and competition has turned students into consumers and colleges into businesses. Tuition is unaffordable. Student loan debt is more than $1.6 trillion, and a majority of college faculty work in adjunct positions for low pay and with no security. Colleges exist to enroll students, collect tuition, and hold classes. When learning happens, it is in spite of the system, not because of it. The coronavirus pandemic has laid bare what we already know: the current system is unsustainable. We have forgotten that education is infrastructure, and are paying a high price for this wrong turn thirty-plus years ago. In Sustainable. Resilient. Free., author and educator John Warner maps out a way forward, one by which our public colleges and universities are reoriented around enhancing the intellectual, social, and economic potentials of students while providing broad-based benefits to the community at large. As Warner explains, it's not even complicated. It's no more costly than the current system. We just have to choose to live the values we claim to hold dear.
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