Posted on 07/10/2014 7:16:43 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
An academic sets out to expose The Great Accreditation Farce but his efforts border on the farcical. By awarding accreditation to religious colleges, the process confers legitimacy on institutions that systematically undermine the most fundamental purposes of higher education, Peter Conn wrote in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Skeptical and unfettered inquiry is the hallmark of American teaching and research.
However, such inquiry cannot flourishin many cases, cannot even surviveinside institutions that erect religious tests for truth. Conn is an English professor at Penn.
This, in my view, can only be described as a scandal, Conn avers. Providing accreditation to colleges like Wheaton makes a mockery of whatever academic and intellectual standards the process of accreditation is supposed to uphold. If accrediting agencies are playing by the rules in this continuing fiasco, then the rules have to be changedor interpreted more aggressively, so that respect for belief systems does not entail approving the subversion of our core academic mission by this or that species of dogma.
Economist Richard Vedder has written of the rather farcical way in which college accreditation is pursued, with administrators, effectively, accrediting themselves. For example 83% of the board for Middle States Commission on Higher Education is comprised of people that work for institutions that they then accredit, Vedder wrote. Nevertheless, to even suggest that free and open inquiry is what is being pursued in secular universities is a bit of a reach, particularly in a year in which a number of universities disinvited commencement speakers who were even mildly outside their political comfort zone.
Yet and still, Conn goes on to, perhaps inadvertently make a good point. I also object to the expenditure of taxpayer dollars in support of religious ideology, in particular when that ideology has set itself in opposition to the findings of modern science, he argues.
As we have found, when private religious colleges start pursuing government aid, they lose at least some of their spiritual grounding. This is particularly notable in Catholic institutions of higher learning. For example, its hard to find an actual Crucifix at Holy Cross, or, for that matter, many other Catholic colleges and universities.
This is the reason why I threw resumes in the trash from job candidates who graduated from Penn.
Lol, radical postmodern secular humanism is the state religion of Academia, so, oddly, I agree with him.
Except when it comes to global warming, conservative speakers, etc.
“Conn is an English professor...”
Somehow, that comes as no surprise.
some “epiphany” more a disclosing of a long-pursued
agenda ...
accreditation ... tax exemption ....
things that may change in a big way ...
When all Christian colleges are forcibly closed, our spineless Republican “leaders” will do and say nothing. And that day will be soon at hand.
"By awarding accreditation to religious colleges, the process confers legitimacy on institutions that systematically undermine the most fundamental purposes of higher education, Peter Conn wrote.
It seems to me it's the other way around. How you can call something higher education when you poo-poo Western Civilization, is beyond me. Professor snobby elite, or effete, or both. :)
from Penn? Ya think?
It sounds like that worked for you.
don’t forget women’s studies centers.
:)
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