Posted on 05/14/2015 7:51:32 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
At the South by Southwest education conference in Austin, Texas recently, on a panel entitled Whats Next for Access and Affirmative Action? administrators such as Anne-Marie Nunez from the University of Texas (UT) system revealed some of their thought processes.
Nunez, an associate professor of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at UT, San Antonio, explained that one of her projects included an initiative designed for Latina immigrants in California. When underrepresented minority students were instructed to think about sociopolitical issues, they began to build more of a sense of entitlement, she said, adding that it is a different kind of entitlement than other students might feel We should take back what is ours, she said in describing respondent sentiments. Our people clean there, they have helped build it, and we should take that back. Students see this happening, relays Nunez, they see the exclusion happening.
As well, Nunez mentioned a unique experiment from the University of Michigan. They started a living-learning program where professors, including professors of ethnic studies classes, lived in the same dorms as students, and they intentionally brought together students of different racial-ethnic backgrounds.
Leftists often argue that states and the federal government ought to spend even more taxpayer dollars on public colleges. Following suit, Nunez railed against present financial support for academic institutions: In most states public funding for higher education has declined significantly to the point where even public universities might not even be thought of as public because so many of their funds come from in some cases, 90%, I would say do not come from the public part of that is related to the public disinvestment in higher education that trickles down to public disinvestment in K-12 education and increased, say, student-to-teacher ratios and student-to-counselor ratios.
By extension Nunez believes societal welfare and university attendance are interrelated. Too often higher education is framed as a cost by the media as opposed to an investment, she cautioned. Nunez, by referencing specific economists, implied that the majority of the benefits from postsecondary schooling are social not individual. Its quite possible that theres severe underinvestment in higher education The most challenging issue, she claimed, is promoting a public will for public higher education.
I think focusing on the assets that students bring to the campus or to an outreach program
looking at students really holistically, Nunez casually remarked, is really important.
With today's 'educators' it's more like a 'ripoff' than a cost...
How about a long-deserved and well-earned death?
What an idiot. We have the “Idiot in Chief” Obozzo pushing for two free years of college for every non white or so it seems, add all the other hand outs and freebies he keeps pushing and we never once have heard the word WORK or why it is important to the family etc. The left wants more money for someone to rebuild the inner cities and infrastructure. I say get everyone drawing government welfare out of the house and away from their gang/distraction from work and make them WORK cleaning up and rebuilding things.
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