Tuesday, December 01, 2020


Memo to Universities: The Public Dislikes Collegiate Racial Preferences

Two stories in the last two weeks lead me to return to the topic of race on college campuses. On Election Day, the people of California soundly voted (56.8%) against Proposition 16, a measure that would have repealed Proposition 209 passed by California voters in 1996. Prop 209, in turn, used language taken from landmark 1960s federal civil rights legislation, essentially banning any preferences or negative assessments of individuals in college admissions, employment, or contracting based on race, sex, ethnicity or national origin.

The California vote is remarkable in many regards, as recounted at a National Association of Scholars webinar recently by Gail Heriot, professor of law at the University of San Diego, also the co-chair of both the groups opposing Prop 16 as well as that promoting the original Prop 209. She is also a longtime member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.

The highly progressive California Assembly approved putting Prop 16 on the ballot by a lopsided 60 to 14 vote. The California Senate strongly assented, 30 to 10. Governor Gavin Newsom endorsed it. The Regents of the University of California urged passage, as did the huge California State University System, not to mention virtually all prominent newspapers. To assure victory, the proponents of the measure spent a stunning $22 million promoting Proposition 16, vastly more than the opponents, running scare ads claiming that opponents were white racial extremists (which I found startling since the other Prop 16 opponent co-chair, Ward Connerly, is Black).

Prop 209 was followed by similar measures in several other populous states such as Washington and Michigan. Like California, last year voters in Washington rejected legislative efforts to restore racial preferences. Have public attitudes changed? The answer from liberal California and Washington is no—interestingly the California vote in 2020 was even more lopsided than in 1996.

The universities, however, once more, seem to believe “the public be damned,” or, worse, “we are smarter, morally more upright and enlightened than the masses of Americans,” what New York socialite Leona Helmsley once called “the little people.” They persist in aggressively expanding racial consciousness on campus, promoting policies that implicitly assume that skin coloration is important, overriding race neutral policies predicated on assessments of merit. I ask: Is it any wonder that public support for higher education has waned somewhat in modern times?

On November 12, a three-judge (although one has since died) panel of the federal court of appeals for the First Circuit ruled in favor of Harvard University in a lawsuit initiated by Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA), a group that has filed several lawsuits challenging affirmative action admission policies, including at prestigious state universities such as the University of North Carolina and the University of Texas. The court said that “subjective” admissions criteria are in and of themselves permissible, and that Harvard had not abused this in a manner that clearly demonstrated that Blacks were shown unacceptable preferences based solely on their racial designation.

This was Round Two in a battle that many persons assume will go to the U.S. Supreme Court. For decades, the Court has made narrow rulings that have not definitely resolved the issue of whether race can be legitimately and importantly considered in admissions decisions. With a radical change in court composition, namely three Trump-era appointees who tend to be textualists rather than judges favoring expansive interpretations of federal statutes and the Constitution, it is entirely possible that the Court will both take the appeal that SFFA leader Edward Blum has indicated is forthcoming, possibly moving to a stricter, more literal interpretation of the 1960s civil rights legislation on which modern day admissions policies must comply.

In both the California and Harvard cases, it is clearly not “white privilege” versus “oppressed minorities.” In both cases, Asian-Americans are playing offense, suggesting affirmative action policies as administered at universities have been highly discriminatory towards them. The big losers in race-conscious admissions decisions are probably not whites but Asians. They are the ones who lose the most when schools drop SAT or ACT requirements and substitute more “subjective” criteria that allow admissions officials to use whatever value system they want to arrive at who is to be admitted to America’s top schools.

Fairfax Schools Study Proves Just How Badly Virtual Learning Is Affecting Kids' Education

Fairfax County Public Schools, the largest school system in Virginia, has become ground zero for what not to do during a pandemic. The school district enforced virtual learning. and the

As it turns out, at-home virtual classes have put a deep dent in these kids' education.

Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia, which has been mostly online since March, published an internal analysis this week showing that, between the last academic year and this one, the percentage of middle school and high school students earning F’s in at least two classes jumped by 83 percent: from 6 percent to 11 percent. By the end of the first quarter of 2020-2021, nearly 10,000 Fairfax students had scored F’s in two or more classes — an increase of more than 4,300 students as compared with the group who received F’s by the same time last year. (Washington Post)

The shocking findings even caught the attention of former U.S. ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley.

Superintendent Scott Brabrand, who halted this fall's return to classes following an uptick in COVID cases in the Washington area, acknowledged the learning gap, but offered no concrete timeline for getting students back in the classroom.

"We are working on identifying these students by name and by need and are working on specific interventions to support them right now and as we phase back in person," he said.

We've singled out Fairfax here, but academic struggle is becoming a disturbing trend across the country. As the Washington Post points out, more than 40 percent of students are earning failing grades in at least two of their classes at the Independent School District in Houston, according to the Houston Chronicle.

Teachers' unions continue to insist on at-home learning because of safety concerns. But new research from UNICEF shows "no consistent link between reopening schools and increased rates of coronavirus infection."

In fact, as Politico summarized, "there is strong evidence that, with basic safety measures in place, the net benefits of keeping schools open outweigh the costs of closing them."

University Administrators’ Pandemic Power Grab

Universities’ profligate spending habits have caught up with them after substantial losses in student enrollments due to COVID-19. As undergraduate enrollment fell by 4.4 percent and students had fewer “on-campus experiences,” universities desperately began laying off employees. Some even have plans to consolidate departments and entire campuses.

Those actions spell trouble for the future of the shared governance tradition on American campuses.

Shared governance allows faculty to participate in determining university priorities pertaining to administrative hires, education policies, and the budget. Faculty participation in university governance allows academic and educational interests to have a seat at the decision-making table. While shared governance has already been steadily weakened over the past several decades due to concerning trends such as adjunctification and administrative bloat, it could face its final crisis as universities consolidate and centralize power in response to the pandemic.

Similar to the power and money grab by large corporations from small businesses during COVID-19, centralized power in higher education makes it easier for ever-growing administrations to execute their own priorities—without faculty interference. This centralization and consolidation is happening at an unprecedented rate across all levels: employee, department, and institution.

Employee Level

Early estimates by the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that nearly 484,000, or a tenth of workers, left the higher education industry between February and September 2020.

A good starting assumption is that the majority of those cuts should be positions that are 1) not directly related to the institution’s mission, or 2) dependent upon on-campus operations. These cuts would reflect sensible responses to the economic pressure from COVID lockdowns.

Regarding on-campus workers, the University of Delaware, unsurprisingly, laid off 3.5 percent of its 3,570 full-time staff members, mostly on-campus staff related to facilities maintenance, construction project management, and conference services. The University of Texas at San Antonio laid off 243 staff members who worked mainly in the academic and business affairs departments. Long Island University laid off 59 staff members, which included secretaries, librarians, and financial aid counselors.

Some higher-level administrators took salary cuts or forfeited raises as well. At Ohio University, vice presidents, deans, and other leadership personnel took between a 6-20 percent cut to their base salaries. Still, base salaries for these administrators ranged from a generous $123,000 to as high as $416,000.

But cuts to base salaries do not tell the full story. The senior vice president for finance and administration at Ohio University, who can also authorize lay-offs, accepted a $100,000 bonus in July 2020. The university offered this bonus even after more than 400 employees were let go due to the university’s financial struggles.

It may be that these “chop from the top” slogans are nothing more than PR stunts like it has been suggested at the College of William and Mary. There, salary protections for salaried employees had some substantial fine print—employees of specific departments had little to no protection.

Even during these financially difficult times, however, colleges continued to hire diversity officers, who often make six-figure salaries. Northwestern University recently named a new chief diversity officer, despite laying off nearly 90 staff members. The University of Iowa College of Law hired its first diversity director while the University of Pennsylvania created a vice president for social equity and community position. Colgate University is currently searching for a diversity officer.

University executives have not taken substantial enough pay cuts to make up for revenue losses. Nor have they cut mid-level administrators in departments like student affairs or development. That reluctance has meant making the extreme decision to slash tenured faculty positions.

Adjunct and non-tenured faculty, who have little-to-no job security, are usually the first to go when times are tough. But during the pandemic, cuts to tenured faculty were not off the table. The University of Akron slashed nearly 100 unionized faculty positions, the majority of whom had tenure. Even wealthy, prestigious Yale University stopped hiring tenure-track faculty for a period of time.

When administrators are a growing proportion of employees, relative to academic faculty, university decisions will skew more toward their interests. The decisions following COVID-19 not only weaken shared governance—they also encourage universities to create a larger class of dispensable employees: adjunct professors, lecturers, part-time instructors, and so on. Each individual in this class of employees has less influence and interest in the long-term health of the university.

Departmental Level

Many universities have responded to revenue losses by consolidating or eliminating academic departments. Guilford College plans to phase out nearly half of its academic majors—19 out of 42. Most of these departments, which include philosophy and political science, enroll very few students. The University of Wyoming looks to eliminate or consolidate over 20 low-enrollment departments as well. While their plans would eliminate 57 academic employees, their entire financial response to the pandemic only terminates 23 non-academic employees. Ithaca College also plans to eliminate low-enrollment academic departments, which would affect 130 faculty members, some of whom have tenure.

Those departmental cuts will decrease the number of professors on campus and further weaken their representation in shared governance. However, consolidation is not necessarily all bad. Consolidation in some peripheral (and virulently ideological) administrative and academic departments can reduce bloat and cut down on costs. For example, had Purdue University followed through with their original plan to consolidate their School of Interdisciplinary Studies—which includes units in Comparative Literature, Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and Global Studies—they would have gone from 16 department directors to 6. Many of these departments propagate destructive ideas such as social justice and identity politics.

However, university budget decisions should not just consider enrollment numbers in an academic department. These numbers do not necessarily indicate a department’s academic value. Some majors, like the Classics, do not attract many students compared to trendy majors like Communications and Psychology. But that doesn’t mean the Classics deserve to die.

The actions taken by universities aren’t temporary aberrations; they foreshadow the things to come.
Universities that cut down on these under-represented majors forget that academia is a preserver of knowledge, not simply a business. When these departments are cut or merged, professors who have the ability to disseminate this specialized knowledge are left high and dry, either unemployed or cloistered off in some shrinking corner of a merged leviathan.

Institutional Level

The third way our higher education system is centralizing is through university mergers, the last resort that saves institutions at the brink of financial insolvency. Schools that considered consolidation were most often performing poorly even before COVID-19. The pandemic was the final nail in the coffin for these fading institutions.

The Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) is considering a merger of three pairs of universities within its 14-school system. This consideration follows years of student enrollment declines and poor financial decisions. Student enrollment at PASSHE schools fell by 20 percent during the 2010s as Pennsylvania produced fewer high school graduates and other colleges within and outside the state attracted the smaller pool of graduates. Yet, during this decline, PASSHE increased employee salaries and benefits by 11 percent and invested more in building upgrades. Pension liabilities nearly tripled as well.

It remains unclear whether the merger will mean faculty cuts, though more than 100 tenured and tenure-track faculty members are already set to lose their positions across five of the system’s schools. It’s possible, and likely, that there will be cuts in either redundant workers or employees in departments that do not survive the merger.

Takeaways

Though we don’t yet know what long-term effects of pandemic cuts will be, it seems likely that consolidation and centralization will continue as faculty fade from influence in governance decisions. The projected baby bust in the coming years means that even when students return to college, we can expect low enrollment numbers to persist. Thus, the actions taken by universities aren’t temporary aberrations; they foreshadow the things to come.

Universities, and particularly university executives, are taking advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic to defenestrate full-time and tenured faculty from their positions of influence in making decisions about the future of the university. On-campus blue-collar staff will return with the students, but even if universities recover their lost revenue, they will likely turn to part-time and adjunct professors to fill instructional gaps.

This “hollowing out of the middle” inside our higher education system echoes broad economic trends in the United States for the past several decades—and what’s happening in the rest of the economy during COVID-19.

Universities no longer feel a strong connection to their educational mission as institutions; at least, if not, they see it in a far different way than they did a century ago. The pursuit of truth and the passing of the torch of civilization have given way to the efficient production of corporate- and government-funded research materials, and the maintenance and growth of a top-heavy bureaucratic machine.

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My other blogs: Main ones below

http://snorphty.blogspot.com (TONGUE-TIED)

http://dissectleft.blogspot.com (DISSECTING LEFTISM)

http://antigreen.blogspot.com (GREENIE WATCH)

http://pcwatch.blogspot.com (POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH)

http://australian-politics.blogspot.com/ (AUSTRALIAN POLITICS)

http://awesternheart.blogspot.com.au/ (THE PSYCHOLOGIST)

https://heofen.blogspot.com/ (MY OTHER BLOGS)

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