I haven't forgotten that I have a blog. I'm just on a six-week road trip across the country, and will be back to writing regularly when the road trip ends. Things I have seen have given me plenty to write about.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Transforming the obligatory passage point
As you’ve probably noticed, the frequency of posts on this
blog went from five per week to one (maybe two) per month over the past few
months; I have been working on my dissertation, which I am glad to tell you I
have just completed. (Well, it is bittersweet, really, because my
not-so-well-kept secret is that I have loved graduate school; my advisor is an
amazing woman.) And speaking of school, I wanted to elaborate a little bit more on the role and power of higher education in creating a changed
culture, one that is aligned with being more ecologically holistic and socially
just. As I have written about at length previously (here and here), the current higher education system continues to create students with cognitive bias those good at one thing and not many, all the while making vast amounts of money.
When we think of universities, we think of them as bastions
of critical thinking and academic freedom. The (wishful) goal is that college
is a place where naïve youth are transformed into active and engaged
citizens…the University of Michigan modestly calls its students and alumni “The
Leaders and Best”. But while my experience at the University of Michigan has
served me well, I also feel that the University, and the higher education system
more broadly, is doing a disservice to the families and students that are
paying out of their noses to obtain a college degree. Grade inflation and
not-too-rigourous course requirements basically mean that it takes a motivated
student to get a valuable experience. Within the higher education system, it
seems as though universities compete on the front of how employable to large
industry and Wall Street their students are, how much corporate funding the
universities receive, and how large their endowment coffers are (Michigan’s
stands at several billion dollars).
When it comes to graduate school, recent unionization efforts of graduate
student research assistants have uncovered a whole host of unseemly
student-advisor relationships; the point of research seems to be the professor’s
ability to get more grants. Each one of these points I can elaborate on at
length, which I will spare you from now.
During my defense, Andrew asked me about recommendations I
had on how young engineers can align their work with the causes of social
justice and ecological soundness, rather than with extractive industry and
militarism…a complicated question for a dissertation defense…Of course, the
first thing I thought of is…higher
education…In reality, that’s how many debates end: “We’ve screwed things
up, and it will be up to “the next generation” to get out of the messes of
today. We must educate the next generation differently.” While it may seem that
many of these words are empty and used lightly, I do believe that education
reform stands the best chance of culturing people to be more concerned about
social justice and ecological soundness.
People from all over the world gather in a place like Ann
Arbor; sprinkled and scattered widely, students, faculty and staff are now
concentrated, and they are shaped and morphed by the education and educating
process. The diploma students walk out with symbolizes the transformation. And
once students leave, they leave for elsewhere; the students are scattered and
sprinkled again. (Unfortunately, it is my impression that most students from
Michigan go to one of four places: Chicago, San Francisco, Manhattan, and
Boston, and not back to where they came from.) The best place for intervention
in production is the factory. (How sad that mass production is an apt metaphor
for higher education.) Higher education is an obligatory passage point in the
modern world—without a degree, life can be difficult (and it may be difficult
with a degree, too). In social science theory, an obligatory passage point is essentially a node in a social network of actors--in the creation of federal policy, the House and the Senate are obligatory passage points; in approving drugs for use, the FDA is an OPP...you get the gist. Therefore, one of the best chances the world stands for transformation is through the transformation of higher education. As students, I believe that we must demand an education that allows us to transform the structures that support unjust and ecologically degrading outcomes, not an education that keeps us entrenched in those structures. Indeed, that may be the best thing we as students can do for the next generation.
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