Book Review: Academically Adrift…. By Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa
Question: How well are
college students of today educated?
Answer/Quote: “Academically Adrift, by Richard arum and
Josipa Roksa, takes on a well-worn theme—the failure of the U.S. Education system.
In this case, higher education. For generations now, employers, policymakers,
and faculty themselves have complained about college students. They socialize
too much, don’t study enough, and leave college woefully ill-equipped for
productive citizenship and employment. On that topic, Arum and Roksa cover
familiar ground and arrive at similar conclusions. Of course, students aren’t
the only problem in higher education highlighted in Academically Adrift: tenured faculty attend to their own research
interests rather than undergraduate education; faculty and administrators cater
to ‘consumers,’ privileging ‘customer satisfaction’ over academic quality and
rigor; policymakers, seeking greater accountability, turn to standardization
and ranking systems (with disappointing results and often punitive
consequences, at least in K-12 education); and, culturally, increased
commercialization of education means’ credentials’ are valued over competency.
For the most part, these critiques are legitimate and well substantiated.” P.
495-496.
Comment: Once again, highlighting failure and
weakness over strengths, creativity and competence in education. I keep saying
that “This, too, will pass” but the steady drumbeat of failure undermines the
spirit by presenting unbalanced conclusions. RayS.
Title: “Important
Focus, Limited Perspective.” Carolyn Calhoon-Dillahunt. College Composition and Communication (February 2012), 495-499.
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