Public education should be free.
If it isn't free, it isn't public education.
Aaron Bady. Al Jazeera.
This should not be a
controversial assertion. This should be common sense. But Americans have
forgotten what the "public" in "public education" actually
means (or used to mean). The problem is that the word no longer has anything to
refer to: This country's public universities have been radically transformed.
The change has happened so slowly and so gradually — bit by bit, cut by cut
over half a century — that it can be seen really only in retrospect. But
with just a small amount of historical perspective, the change is dramatic:
public universities that once charged themselves to open their doors to all who
could benefit by attending — that were, by definition, the public property of
the entire state — have become something entirely different.
What we still call public
universities would be more accurately described as state-controlled private
universities — corporate entities that think and behave like businesses.
Whereas there once was a public mission to educate the republic's citizens,
there is now the goal of satisfying the educational needs of the market, aided
by PR departments that brand degrees as commodities and build consumer
interest, always with an eye to the bottom line. And while public universities
once sought to advance the industry of the state as a whole, with an eye to the
common good, shortfalls in public funding have led to universities' treating
their research capacity as a source of primary fundraising, developing new
technologies and products for the private sector, explicitly to raise the money
they need to operate. Conflicts of interest are now commonplace.
Should public universities be
free? Only because our public universities have been so fundamentally
privatized over the last 40 years does the sentence "Public universities
should be free" even make sense. Of course they should be free! If an
education is available only to those who can afford it — if an education is a
commodity to be purchased in the marketplace — in what sense can it really be
called public?
Let there be light
In the early 1960s, California
formulated a master plan for higher education — a single name for a set of
interlocking policies developed by University of California president Clark
Kerr. The idea was that any Californian who wanted a postsecondary education
would have a place to go in the state's three-tiered system. Students could go
to a community college for free, and from there they could transfer to a
California State University or a University of California — where no tuition
was charged, only course fees that were intended to be nominal. New
universities were swiftly planned and built to meet the dramatic increase in
demand expected from baby boomers and the state's growing population; as more
and more citizens aspired to higher education, California opened more and more
classrooms and universities to give them that opportunity. The master plan was
not a blank check, but it was a commitment: any Californian who wanted a
postsecondary education could get one.
Today that is simply not true.
For one thing, institutions like the University of California have not grown to
meet the rising demand; year by year, bit by bit, as the state's population has
continued to grow, a larger percentage of California students have been turned
away or replaced by out-of-state students (who pay much higher tuition). In
fact, university officials are quite explicit about the fact that they are
admitting more out-of-state and international students (and fewer Californians)
in order to raise money. Historically, about 10 percent of the U.C.'s student
population was from out of state, but that number has more than doubled
since the 2008 financial crisis. (In Michigan, which has been hit even harder
than California, out-of-state enrollment in the University of Michigan system
is closer to 40 percent.)
If this country can build the world's largest military
and fight open-ended wars in multiple theaters across the globe, it can find a
way to pay for public education.
Most important, as tuition
steadily rises to the level of comparable private universities, the word
"public" comes to mean less and less. Indeed, when Mark Yudof was
appointed president of the University of California in 2008, he was known as an
advocate of what he had called in 2002 the hybrid university: an institution
that retained some of the characteristics of a public university but would draw
the bulk of its revenue from student tuition.
Yudof's vision of the
"public" university would have been unrecognizable to the architects
of the master plan: instead of providing the tools for the state's citizens to
better themselves, state universities are to survive by thinking like a
business, selling their product for as much as the market will bear. From the
point of view of higher-education consumers — which are what its students have
effectively become — the claim that the U.C. system is public rings
increasingly false with every passing year.
For my parents, by contrast,
distinction between public and private was very clear. Both baby boomers and
the first in their families to get college degrees, they went to public
universities because they were affordable and private universities were not. By
that definition, are there any public universities left? Schools that are at least
partially funded and controlled by elected officials, usually at the state
level, are nominally public, and the broad range of universities that are not
owned by the government — from nonprofit corporations like Harvard to
explicitly for-profit corporations like the University of Phoenix or Udacity —
truly inhabit the private sector. But if the price tag is the same, if the
product is the same and if the experience is the same, what difference does a
university's tax status make? A university that thinks and behaves like a
private-sector corporation — charging its consumers what the market will bear,
cutting costs wherever it can and using competition with its peers as its
measure of success — is a public university in name only.
Open roads and toll roads
A better way to compare public
and private would be to consider the difference between public roads and toll
roads. Some toll roads are owned and operated by state governments and some by
the private sector. But does the driver care who owns the road? I doubt
it; the important thing is whether the road is free and open to all or whether
it can be used only by those who can afford to drive on it. The same is true of
public and private universities: A university is public only if those who need
to use it can do so.
In this sense, it seems to me
that the malaise that afflicts our public universities is not really about
about dollars and cents. If this country can build the world's largest military
and fight open-ended wars in multiple theaters across the globe, it can find a
way to pay for public education, as it once did in living memory. But doing so
has ceased to be a real priority. Affordable public education is no longer
something we expect, demand or take for granted; to argue that public education
should be free makes you sound like an absurd and unrealistic utopian.
Meanwhile, we take it for granted that roads should be free to drive on, a toll
road here or there not withstanding. You provide the car and the gas; the state
provides the road.
This used to be how we thought
about our public universities, before they became exorbitant toll roads. If you
had the grades and the ambition, there was a classroom open to you. But if
every road were a toll road, no one would expect to drive for free. If every
road were a toll road, the very idea that the government would build and
maintain a massive system of roads and highways — and then let anyone use it
(for free!) — would seem fantastical, ridiculous, even perverse. People
expecting the right to drive anywhere they pleased, for free, would be branded
utopian, socialist and deluded, soft-hearted liberals demanding a free lunch.
That's the world we live in when it comes to highways. When the roads that
drive our economy and make modern life possible get too crowded or too
congested, we expect the state to build new roads. When the old roads wear out,
they are repaved. When a tree or a landslide obstructs a thoroughfare, the
state clears the way. When there are not enough classrooms, on the other hand,
the state no longer builds new universities; it simply charges more.
For most of the 20th century,
when the overwhelming majority of this country's public universities were
built, it was simply common sense that a growing college-age population had to
be matched by a growing system of accessible higher education, something that —
as √the government did provide. They were explicitly chartered to bring a
college degree within the reach of as many citizens as possible and to advance
the greater good by disseminating knowledge as widely as possible. Without that
common sense, that bipartisan consensus, our public universities would never
have been built in the first place. And judged by that original standard, there
are few, if any, public universities left.
Aaron Bady is a postdoctoral fellow at the University
of Texas and formerly a doctoral candidate at the University of California,
Berkeley. He is also an editor and blogger at the New Inquiry.
The views expressed in this article are the author's
own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera America's editorial policy.
No comments:
Post a Comment