2019-3-4 13:54| 发布者: 胡老师| 查看: 1781| 评论: 0
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Michael Rubin 【Washington Examiner】 Once upon a time, the main job of university presidents was to provide intellectual leadership. Before Woodrow Wilson became governor of New Jersey and rose to the presidency, he was the president of Princeton University, known for his scholarship on Congress. Kingman Brewster, Jr., was an anti-war activist and isolationist who volunteered for the Navy after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. He served as a diplomat and administrator of the Marshall Plan before returning to an academic career, ultimately becoming Yale’s president. Succeeding him was A. Bartlett Giamatti, who distinguished himself as a renaissance man at Yale University, before moving on to run first the National League and then Major League Baseball. In recent decades, however, fundraising supplanted intellectual leadership among university presidents. University presidents have basically become CEOs, responsible for the bottom line. They measure their success in donations and endowment growth; intellectual leadership is often secondary, and with every year becoming less so as administration becomes its own career track distinct from a career producing academic scholarship. Indeed, one of the reasons why University of Chicago President Robert Zimmer’s declaration of commitment to free speech received so much attention was that it stood in such sharp contrast to the attitudes of so many other universities. Nowhere has the slide from intellectual leadership to business management been more pronounced than at Yale University. If the example of Yale President Peter Salovey is any indication, however, the ability to succeed at fundraising while ignoring intellectual leadership may soon ensure failure at both. Salovey has now been president of Yale University for more than five years. A popular psychology professor, Salovey served four years as dean of Yale College and five years as the university’s provost before assuming the top post. As a professor, Salovey was known for entertaining lectures and easy grades. He craved popularity, at one point in the early 1990s teaching a class in which more than 1,000 students, or one-in-four undergraduates, were enrolled.
The need for affirmation among both students and faculty meant that the response to every controversy was to ameliorate, calm, and concede absent intellectual consistency. He threw respect for free speech and decorum under the bus when he compelled the resignation of Silliman College master Nicholas Christakis in the face of the “shrieking girl” controversy. He legitimized violence when he rehired a dishwasher who smashed a historic stained glass window. In general, he catered to the loudest on campus, always willing to grease the squeaky wheel regardless of the consequence.
When students complained that the term "freshmen" disrespected women and "master" made African-Americans uncomfortable, he simply ordered their change, never mind that it was he who was racializing a term that had ancient collegiate roots. That Yale continues to issue master’s degrees only highlights the lack of intellectual consistency. Then, when decades-long student protests persisted with regard to a residential college named after 19th century statesmen and Vice President John Calhoun due to the support Calhoun professed during his lifetime for slavery, Salovey first said he would keep the name out of respect for history but, when criticized by student activists, convened a handpicked and Orwellian “ Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming” which recommended changing the name of the college. The problem with such a move was not simply the willingness to erase history at one of the nation’s most elite universities, but also intellectual inconsistency: Calhoun may have provided intellectual sustenance to the pro-slavery south, a not uncommon position at the time, but Elihu Yale, after whom the entire university is named, actually traded slaves during his lifetime.
Salovey’s hostility toward history has extended further to university tradition. Yale long prided itself on being centered on its undergraduates. Admissions officers sang the merits of residential colleges, each a unique community within the broader university. But, Salovey, who did not attend Yale as an undergraduate, homogenized the colleges in order to eliminate any differences between them. While the freshmen class dined together in “University Commons” since 1901, he closed the iconic dining hall in order to build a student center whose need (or need in that location) most students (let alone alumni) continue to question. Most recently, Salovey has put the open stacks of Yale’s underground library on the chopping block.
Now, it seems that the university is paying the price for Salovey’s general gutlessness. Yale has, for years, been seeking to undertake a major capital campaign. Often, universities announce their campaigns after a silent stage in which they get high-profile donors to commit to the effort. According to staffers within Yale’s fundraising arm, the university was forced to delay its campaign for several years because big donors are rightly worried about Yale’s direction and its tendency to prioritize politics above academics.
Yale’s embrace of identity politics reinvigorates self-segregation and pits groups against each other. An ever-expanding array of ethnic deans spoon feeds ideology to students rather than make them organize for themselves. Yale administrators, largely for political reasons, increasingly seek to weigh in on the private lives of students off campus. Donations are declining as faculty and student antics increasingly hit national headlines or the courts. Giving in the first quarter of the last fiscal year, for example, is lower than in the period for the four previous years.
Yale is also falling behind in fundraising among its peer group of universities as alumni decide not to give. Older alum largely disagree with the direction of the university as it subordinates academe to social action, while the younger alumni whom Salovey sought to appease do not understand why they should donate to a university with a nearly $30 billion endowment. Rather than question fundamentally why the money is no longer rolling in, the university’s response is simply to cease reporting donation statistics.
While Yale cultivates a reputation as an educational and intellectual center, its emphasis under Salovey has been more about politics and social justice. The university trumpets ethnic, religious, and sexual orientation diversity, but shuns intellectual diversity which arguably should trump every other kind.
Perhaps the decline in donations is a sign that Yale’s, and, by extension, other elite universities’, ability to coast on reputation while treating its core education mission with disdain has come to an end. Perhaps it is time for Salovey to resign. |
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