
Also of interest:
Equity and Excellence in American
Higher Education
"There are of late several good books about the crisis
in higher education, but this is the one that is indispensable."
—Robert N. Bellah, co-author of Habits of the Heart
and recipient of the National Humanities Medal
" This is an eloquent, wise, and important book."
Elizabeth McKinsey is Professor of English and American Studies
at Carleton College, and higher education consultant
"In recent years, the ethic of the marketplace has transformed
America's elite universities. Money talks, whether it's in the science
lab where industry contracts shape research agendas, or the English
department where star professors write their own ticket. This provocative
and elegantly written book details how that state of affairs came
to be and the dangers it poses to the academy. It sounds an alarm
that needs to be heard by anyone concerned about the soul of the
university."
David L. Kirp, University of California, Berkeley, author
of Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line: The Marketing
of Higher Education
|
Saving Higher Education in the Age of Money |
| James Engell and Anthony Dangerfield |
| 304 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2331-X $27.95 |
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Since 1965 an increasing preoccupation with money has resulted
in the inversion of its role in higher education, from a practical
means to an end that crowds out all others. No longer do students
and parents choose the best education that “money can buy.”
Instead, they are faced with choosing which college or university
will “buy them more money.” This comes as no real
surprise, as the cost of attending a four-year college has doubled
since 1985. Yet the question persists: at what real cost are we
sending our students to college?
Renowned educator James Engell and coauthor Anthony Dangerfield
explore the answer to this question in Saving Higher Education
in the Age of Money. They argue that the counterbalancing
attitudes that used to temper a focus on money with other equally
legitimate and more fundamental goals have steadily weakened,
resulting in a new consensus that elevates money and the marketing
of oneself and one’s institution to the foremost ambitions
of the intellectual world. This new minimization of higher education
to the category of an investment to be repaid has damaged all
disciplines not directly associated with money, particularly the
humanities. Students often now are told they face a choice: between
the practical sciences, business, and economic success, or the
traditional liberal arts and sciences and expected poverty.
In their comprehensive analysis of admission practices, institutional
rankings, salaries, hiring practices, scholarships, student attitudes,
tuition costs, research programs, library budgets, and class barriers,
Engell and Dangerfield expose the major changes that the Age of
Money has wrought in higher education while also offering a practical
method of understanding and prioritizing the various elements
involved in choosing the right school. Focusing on liberal arts
and sciences colleges, private research universities, and flagship
public institutions, the authors provide an explicit and coherent
model of what an academic institution should offer, while encouraging
individual institutions to retain their unique identities.
Written for a general audience as well as for professionals,
Saving Higher Education in the Age of Money will appeal
to teachers and administrators, parents of students and prospective
students, students and faculty in schools of higher education,
and anyone interested in intellectual life.
James Engell is Gurney Professor of English,
Professor of Comparative Literature, and Chair of the Department
of English and American Literature and Language at Harvard University.
He is the author of The Committed Word: Literature and Public
Values , among other books. He has been the recipient of each
of the four major teaching and advising prizes in the Faculty of
Arts and Sciences at Harvard, and he is the winner of Harvard University
Press’s Thomas Wilson Prize for the best first book. Anthony
Dangerfield received his Ph.D. in English from Cornell
University and has taught at Cornell, Dartmouth, and Harvard. He
is cowinner with Engell of the Council for Advancement and Support
of Education’s Gold Medal Award, judged by the Chronicle
of Higher Education.
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