Academically Justifiable Yet Ashford University
Week 1: Purposes of Higher Education
The Purposes of Higher Education
- What is academic freedom? (describe)
- Please unpack the following quotation, “Scholars must recognize a duty to observe scholarly standards of inquiry as a condition of their social office.” (p. 175, analyze)
- What is “democratic higher education”? (describe)
- Integrate the two concepts: What is its relationship between “democratic higher education” and academic freedom? (analyze)
- Unpack the following quotation, “Public attacks on universities for being sanctuaries for social critics are evidence not of the foreignness of universities, but of one of the ways in which they belong to democracies.” (p. 188, analyze)
The Idea of the Multiversity
- What is a “multiversity”? (describe)
- Follow up (or context) from the original question: Unpack this quotation as it relates to what it means to be a “multiversity”: “A university anywhere can aim no higher than to be as British as possible for the sake of undergraduates, as German as possible for the sake the graduates and the research personnel, as American as possible fo the sake of the public at large – and as confused as possible for the sake of the preservation of the whole uneasy balance.” (p. 14) (analyze)
- Kerr was writing in 1994, and he served as chancellor of UC Berkeley in the 1960s. Of what relevance is the concept to contemporary higher education? (analyze)
Never Forget
- What is “educational debt”? (describe)
- What is the history of higher education that we should “never forget”? (describe)
- If we began discussions of higher education institutional policy from this perspective, what would/could this look like? (analyze)
Goals: The Intended Outcomes of Higher Education
- What does Bowen argue is the purpose of credentialing? (pp. 43-44, describe)
- Unpack and directly relate to the purposes listed, “Marx sought to change the world through social institutions. Jesus through changing the hearts of men. Higher education tries to do both.” (p. 31, analyze)
- Bowen refers to higher education as “organized anarchy” (p. 32). Please unpack what this concept means, especially in terms of tensions between pursuit of knowledge, practical applications of said knowledge, and external market forces. (analyze)
- Bowen continued: This chapter is definitely dated. (analyze)
- What positive outcomes do you think are still relevant? (sidebar: do you still see them as positive?)
- Which positive outcomes have gone out to pasture?
- Which negative outcomes specifically do you see as relevant contemporarily?
- Which negative outcomes specifically do you see as irrelevant contemporarily?
- What is missing from this list that you wish was on there?
- What positive outcomes do you think are still relevant? (sidebar: do you still see them as positive?)
*********
Reading Across the Readings
- How do the readings speak to each other?
- For example, Gutmann argues that universities are bastions of non-repression and unpopular ideas (that are academically justifiable), yet Kerr argues these are necessarily conservative institutions.
- Or… Gutmann argues that conferring democratic values is a central purpose of higher education, yet Cabrera argues that the foundation of U.S. higher education was predicated upon systemic exploitation, violence, and exclusion of Communities of Color.
- Or… A lot of the authors talk about or mention academic freedom. What are (or should be) the accompanying academic responsibilities for people exercising academic freedom (please refer to specific pieces from this week)?
- Or… you add something else – a connection or tension you saw between/among the readings.
Meditative Questions
- From a scholarly perspective, what is knowledge?
- From a scholarly perspective, what is an argument?
- Can the pursuit of scholarly knowledge exist without academic freedom? (preview to later weeks)Week
1: Purposes of Higher EducationThe Purposes of
Higher Education
●
What is academic freedom? (describe)○
●
Please unpack the following quotation, “Scholars
must recognize a duty to observe scholarly standards of inquiry as a condition
of their social office.” (p. 175, analyze)○
●
What is “democratic higher education”? (describe)○
●
Integrate the two concepts: What is its
relationship between “democratic higher education” and academic freedom?
(analyze)○
●
Unpack the following quotation, “Public attacks
on universities for being sanctuaries for social critics are evidence not of
the foreignness of universities, but of one of the ways in which they belong to
democracies.” (p. 188, analyze)○
The Idea of the
Multiversity●
What is a “multiversity”? (describe)○
●
Follow up (or context) from the original
question: Unpack this quotation as it relates to what it means to be a
“multiversity”: “A university anywhere can aim no higher than to be as British
as possible for the sake of undergraduates, as German as possible for the sake
the graduates and the research personnel, as American as possible fo the sake
of the public at large – and as confused as possible for the sake of the
preservation of the whole uneasy balance.” (p. 14) (analyze)○
●
Kerr was writing in 1994, and he served as
chancellor of UC Berkeley in the 1960s. Of what relevance is the concept to
contemporary higher education? (analyze)○
Never Forget
●
What is “educational debt”? (describe)○
●
What is the history of higher education that we
should “never forget”? (describe)○
●
If we began discussions of higher education
institutional policy from this perspective, what would/could this look like?
(analyze)○
Goals: The
Intended Outcomes of Higher Education
●
What does Bowen argue is the purpose of
credentialing? (pp. 43-44, describe)○
●
Unpack and directly relate to the purposes
listed, “Marx sought to change the world through social institutions. Jesus
through changing the hearts of men. Higher education tries to do both.” (p. 31,
analyze)○
●
Bowen refers to higher education as “organized
anarchy” (p. 32). Please unpack what this concept means, especially in terms of
tensions between pursuit of knowledge, practical applications of said
knowledge, and external market forces. (analyze)○
*********
●
Bowen continued: This chapter is
definitely dated. (analyze)○
What positive outcomes do you think are still
relevant? (sidebar: do you still see them as positive?)■
○
Which positive outcomes have gone out to pasture?■
○
Which negative outcomes specifically do you see
as relevant contemporarily?■
○
Which negative outcomes specifically do you see
as irrelevant contemporarily?■
○
What is missing from this list that you wish was
on there?■
Reading Across the
Readings
●
How do the readings speak to each other?○
●
For example, Gutmann argues that universities are
bastions of non-repression and unpopular ideas (that are academically
justifiable), yet Kerr argues these are necessarily conservative institutions.○
●
Or…
Gutmann argues that conferring democratic values is a central purpose of higher
education, yet Cabrera argues that the foundation of U.S. higher education was
predicated upon systemic exploitation, violence, and exclusion of Communities
of Color.○
●
Or… A lot of the authors talk about or mention
academic freedom. What are (or should be) the accompanying academic
responsibilities for people exercising academic freedom (please refer to
specific pieces from this week)?○
●
Or… you add something else – a connection or
tension you saw between/among the readings.○
Meditative
Questions
●
From a scholarly perspective, what is knowledge?●
From a scholarly perspective, what is an
argument?●
Can the pursuit of scholarly knowledge exist
without academic freedom? (preview to later weeks)