Does college make you smarter?

Does college make you smarter? Not so much, say respondents on the New York Times’ Room for Debate.

First there was the news that students in American universities study a lot less than they used to. Now we hear, in a recent book titled Academically Adrift, that 45 percent of the nation’s undergraduates learn very little in their first two years of college.

After four years of college, 36 percent of students showed no improvement in reasoning or writing skills, according to sociologists Richard Arum of New York University and Josipa Roksa of the University of Virginia. Students majoring in humanities, social sciences, math and natural sciences learned more than students in pre-professional fields such as education, business and social work. In addition, students who took courses that required significant reading and writing were more likely to show learning gains.

Most college students want “a credential attesting to their employability, accompanied by as much fun as possible,” writes George Leef of the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy.  They didn’t work hard in high school and expect college to be just as easy.

Intellectually vapid courses and programs that will attract customers have proliferated. Professors who would rather devote their time to their own career-advancing research projects often strike an implicit deal with their students: don’t expect much of my time and I’ll keep the course easy and the grades high.

By making it easier for students to borrow money, the federal government is luring “more marginal students into college, further increasing the pressure to lower standards,” Leef adds.

It has been accurately said that college is the new high school; the way we are going, soon it will be the new middle school.

Students aren’t interested in learning, writes Gaye Tuchman, a sociology professor at the University of Connecticut. Nearly all want to know, “Will I be able to get a job?”

Today’s college students average 14 hours a week of study time compared to 24 hours a week for students in the 1960s, writes Philip Babcock, an economics professor at University of California at Santa Barbara.  Thinking requires more effort than most colleges require.

Who’s to blame for college dropouts?

Guest-blogging for Jay Greene, Greg Forster asks: Who’s to Blame for College Dropouts?

Summer reading (colleges hope)

Ninety-three percent of top universities assign a “common reading” to new college students, reports the National Association of Scholars in Back from the Beach: 100 New Books by Ashley Thorne.

President Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father, selected by Quinnipiac University and the University of Washington in 2009, was dropped in 2010.

§ The book with the biggest leap in popularity from June to September is Outcasts United, a story about a group of refugee boys from different countries in Africa and the Middle East who settle in Clarkston, Georgia and are discovered by a Jordanian woman who forms them into a soccer team.

§ Two other top books had a spike in popularity: This I Believe (and This I Believe II), the NPR-assembled anthology that was already the most frequently selected book for common reading; and Persepolis, a graphic novel (comic book) about a girl living in Iran during the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

The society/poverty/women category surged with a number of books exploring “social justice.”

Here’s the recommended reading list from NAS. Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop left me cold. O Pioneers! is a good feminist novel. I should read The Blithedale Romance.

Failure to launch

Core Knowledge’s Robert Pondiscio spent the summer tracking down his first class of  fifth-graders from 2002-03.  The South Bronx students should be high school graduates. Many are not.  Three were accepted to four-year colleges. One will live at home and go to Pace. But the two who were planning to leave home for college have decided they’re not going.

The boy was accepted to SUNY Oswego. The girl — “cheerful, eager to learn” — got into Boston University.

The Oswego-bound young man opted to stay home and enroll at a CUNY college.  The young lady, however, is no longer headed for BU.  She has no firm plans for September but is “thinking about going to Hostos,” a South Bronx community college.

In both cases, these two kids cited the same reason not for going away to school and in nearly identical words.  There is “too much going on at home right now.”   Both said they have sick relatives.  The young lady said her mother was not well and that she was needed at home. 

 ”I don’t feel ready,” she told her former teacher.

So many of her classmates have already failed.   So many have already repeated the mistakes of their parents—quitting school, becoming teen parents.  Lives going nowhere fast.  But here’s a terrific, sweet kid who grows up right, with a good family in a tough neighborhood.  She has the brass ring not just in her sight but in her hand and decides, “I just can’t.”

I suggested he persuade her to defer at BU for a year, go to community college and plan to transfer after a year. That will keep the goal — and the BU scholarship — alive. 

A number of college-prep charter schools that serve students whose parents aren’t well-educated are providing counselors that follow graduates through college.  Students are much more likely to persist if they can turn to someone for help with financial, academic or family problems.  It helps if that person expects them to earn a college degree and will push them to keep going, despite obstacles.

Colleges tell parents to go home

It’s hard to get parents to go home again once they’ve dropped off their kids at college, reports the New York Times.

In order to separate doting parents from their freshman sons, Morehouse College in Atlanta has instituted a formal “Parting Ceremony.”

It began on a recent evening, with speeches in the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel. Then the incoming freshmen marched through the gates of the campus — which swung shut, literally leaving the parents outside.

When University of Minnesota freshmen move in at the end of this month, parental separation will be a little sneakier: mothers and fathers will be invited to a reception elsewhere so students can meet their roommates and negotiate dorm room space — without adult meddling.

Grinnell College gathered students on one side of the gymnasium bleachers, parents on the other.

The president welcoming the class of 2014 had his back to the parents — a symbolic staging meant to inspire “an aha! moment,” said Houston Dougharty, vice president of student affairs, “an epiphany where parents realize, ‘My student is feeling more comfortable sitting with 400 people they just met.’ ”

Then the parents were urged to go home.

Colleges officials talk of “velcro” parents.

NYC tracks grads’ college progress

New York City is telling high schools how well their graduates are doing at public colleges, including how many need remedial classes and how many drop out after the first semester, reports the New York Times. High schools are judged on graduation rates, in part, but not on graduates’ skills.

Illinois, Denver and Philadelphia also are tracking high school graduates to see how they do in college, reports the Times. Studies show many high school graduates falter in college because they lack basic reading, writing and math skills.

New York, like other cities, has made a considerable effort to improve its high school graduation rate — now 59 percent, up from 47 percent in 2005 — and push more of its students to enroll in college. But many of those students are stumbling in basic math and writing: 46 percent of New York City public school graduates who enrolled in one of the City University of New York two-year or four-year colleges in 2007 needed at least one remedial course, and 40 percent of them dropped out within two years.

At a third of the city’s 250 high schools, at least 70 percent of the graduates who went on to CUNY needed remedial help.

This is nothing new, community college instructors told the Times.

Elizabeth Clark teaches remedial writing at LaGuardia Community College to high school graduates who are unprepared to write a college essay.

“They don’t know how long it should be; they don’t know how to develop an argument,” Ms. Clark said. “They have very little ability to get past rhetoric and critically analyze what is motivating the writer, and you have to push them past simple binaries.”

There are also more basic problems, Ms. Clark said, such as students not knowing that each sentence must begin with a capital letter or using “u” instead of “you.”

. . . Susan L. Forman said that many of the issues have remained the same for the four decades she has taught remedial math at Bronx Community College, including students easily confused by fractions and negative numbers and becoming paralyzed when they are told they cannot use calculators.

What has changed, she said, is that students are often overly confident.

They don’t understand how much they don’t understand, she said.

Update: Chicago City Colleges can’t afford remedial classes, said Mayor Richard Daley, who called for limiting admissions to students prepared to do college-level work. Daley envisions offering remedial classes at alternative high schools. This would be a dramatic change, if it happens.

SF plans college accounts for kindergarteners

Despite a $483 million budget deficit, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom wants to start a city-funded college savings account for kindergarteners in public school. From the Chronicle:

The deposits would be small – $50 to start, $100 for lower-income children — but the hope is that they will pay huge dividends, teaching students about saving and budgeting while forging the conviction that a college education is within reach.

The plan is to include all public-school kindergarteners by the third year, with funding help from corporations and nonprofits. Parents will be offered matching funds to encourage them to save their own money.

A study by the Center for Social Development at Washington University in St. Louis found children with modest college savings are seven times more likely to go to college. Of course, parents who set aside money for college are likely to be different from parents who don’t. It’s not clear that unearned savings will produce the same result.

If not college, then what?

Apropos of the subliminal theme for the last few weeks, I thought I’d drop a link to an interesting NY Times story on the possibilities of skipping college.  We should start with a concise statement of the problem facing parents and students:

WHAT’S the key to success in the United States?

Short of becoming a reality TV star, the answer is rote and, some would argue, rather knee-jerk: Earn a college degree.

The idea that four years of higher education will translate into a better job, higher earnings and a happier life — a refrain sure to be repeated this month at graduation ceremonies across the country — has been pounded into the heads of schoolchildren, parents and educators. But there’s an underside to that conventional wisdom. Perhaps no more than half of those who began a four-year bachelor’s degree program in the fall of 2006 will get that degree within six years, according to the latest projections from the Department of Education.

As has been remarked many times by both posters and commenters on this site and others, the problem arises from a classic causation-correlation problem.  Merely because many, or perhaps even most, successful people go to college does not mean that going to college will make you successful.  At long last, I think people are actually starting to wake up to this fact.

A small but influential group of economists and educators is pushing another pathway: for some students, no college at all. It’s time, they say, to develop credible alternatives for students unlikely to be successful pursuing a higher degree, or who may not be ready to do so.

Whether everyone in college needs to be there is not a new question; the subject has been hashed out in books and dissertations for years. But the economic crisis has sharpened that focus, as financially struggling states cut aid to higher education.

So.  Trade schools.  Not a bad idea at all.  But of course, every rose has its thorn…

Still, by urging that some students be directed away from four-year colleges, academics like Professor Lerman are touching a third rail of the education system. At the very least, they could be accused of lowering expectations for some students. Some critics go further, suggesting that the approach amounts to educational redlining, since many of the students who drop out of college are black or non-white Hispanics.

Peggy Williams, a counselor at a high school in suburban New York City with a student body that is mostly black or Hispanic, understands the argument for erring on the side of pushing more students toward college.

“If we’re telling kids, ‘You can’t cut the mustard, you shouldn’t go to college or university,’ then we’re shortchanging them from experiencing an environment in which they might grow,” she said.

So there’s the problem, set out in all of its simple glory.  Do we want false positives, or false negatives?  How fine a sieve?  The answer seems important, because college seems important.  It may actually be a matter of, well, if not life and death, then as the first sentence of the article intimates, at least of success or failure.  After all, the truth is there to see:

There is another rejoinder to the case against college: People with college and graduate degrees generally earn more than those without them, and face lower risks of unemployment, according to figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

But doesn’t that just bring us back to the causation-correlation problem?  Perhaps the point of college shouldn’t be to succeed.  I’m reminded of  John Stuart Mill:

The proper function of a University in national education is tolerably well understood.  At least there is a tolerably general agreement about what a University is not.  It is not a place of professional education.  Universities are not intended to teach the knowledge required to fit men for some special mode of gaining their livelihood.  Their object is not to make skillful lawyers, physicians, or engineers, but capable and cultivated human beings.

* * * *

Men may be competent lawyers without general education, but it depends on general education to make them philosophic lawyers — who demand, and are capable of apprehending, principles, instead of merely cramming their memory with details.  And so of all other useful pursuits, mechanical included.  Education makes a man a more intelligent shoe-maker, if that be his occupation, but not by teaching him how to make shoes; it does so by the mental exercise it gives, and the habits it impresses.

I somehow doubt that there is today such a tolerable general agreement.

Show them the (future) money

Mental time travel motivates students, writes Tom Jacobs (no relation) on Miller-McCune’s online magazine. He cites a University of Michigan study in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology by Mesmin Destin and Daphna Oyserman.

Researchers asked Detroit eighth-graders in a poor, predominantly black school to envision their adult job.  Nearly nine out of 10 expected to go to college, but only 46 percent envisioned an adult career requiring a college education.

Members of that minority “were more likely to invest current effort in schoolwork than those who did not, and these efforts paid off in better grades.”

Why bother to study if you see yourself as a future NBA star or a winner on American Idol?

In the second experiment, one group of seventh-graders looked at a graph showing how earnings rise with education. The other group’s graph “showed median earnings in Michigan and the very high earnings of top actors, athletes and musicians.”

Those who saw the chart linking pay with education were eight times more likely to complete an optional extra-credit assignment.

The children of poorly educated, erratically employed parents hear a lot more about rappers’ riches than they do about how to prepare for a middle-class life.

Years ago, I went on a field trip organized by two kindergarten teachers in a  district with many low-income, immigrant students.  They took every kindergartner in the district to San Jose State for a tour. It started with a pep rally.  A five-year-old stepped up the microphone and said, “I want to be a fireman.” A college student said, “I’m studying fire science so I can get a job as a firefighter.” A firefighter said, “I worked hard in school and went to college. Now I’m a firefighter.” They did three or four careers that way. Very cool.

Boys and girls, living together… it'll be anarchy!

When I went off to college some 18 years past, I knew that the dorm hall was going to be co-ed.  I didn’t know that the bathroom would be.

This was quite a shock.

But I got used to it.  To this day I’m not sure if it is a good thing or a bad thing that I got used to it, but I did.  And people will get used to same-sex dorm rooms, too.

Although the number of participants remains small, gender-neutral housing has gained attention as the final step in the integration of student housing.

In the 1970s, many U.S. colleges moved from having only single-sex dormitories to providing coed residence halls, with male and female students typically housed on alternating floors or wings. Then came coed hallways and bathrooms, further shocking traditionalists. Now, some colleges allow undergraduates of opposite sexes to share a room.

Pitzer, which began its program in the fall of 2008, is among about 50 U.S. schools with the housing choice, according to Jeffrey Chang, who co-founded the National Student Genderblind Campaign in 2006 to encourage gender-mixed rooms. Participating schools include UC Riverside, UC Berkeley, Stanford, Cornell, Dartmouth, Sarah Lawrence, Haverford, Wesleyan and the University of Michigan.

Frankly, I think more choice is probably a good thing.  But more choice means more choice — I rather think that schools should be hesitant to do away with traditional sex-segregated halls.   To the extent that gender-neutral housing might become the new default and could actually be a move in what often seems to be a ceaseless argument for the absolute fungibility of the sexes, I think I would object.  But I’m not sure were anywhere near that point yet.