There is a growing sense of crisis and confusion about the purpose
and sustainability of higher education in the United States. In the
midst of this turmoil, students are frequently referred to as
customers and faculty as employees, educational outcomes are
increasingly measured in terms of hiring and salary metrics for
graduates, and programs are assessed as profit and loss centers.
Despite efforts to integrate business-oriented thinking and
implement new forms of accountability in colleges and universities,
Americans from all backgrounds are losing confidence in the
nation's institutions of higher learning, and these institutions
must increasingly confront what has proven to be an unsustainable
business model. In
Our Higher Calling, Holden Thorp and Buck
Goldstein draw on interviews with higher education thought leaders
and their own experience, inside and outside the academy, to
address these problems head on, articulating the challenges facing
higher education and describing in pragmatic terms what can and
cannot change--and what should and should not change. They
argue that those with a stake in higher education must first
understand a fundamental compact that has long been at the heart of
the American system: a partnership wherein colleges and
universities support the development of an educated and skilled
citizenry and create new knowledge in exchange for stable public
investment and a strong degree of autonomy to pursue research
without undue external pressure. By outlining ways to restore this
partnership, Thorp and Goldstein endeavor to start a conversation
that paves the way for a solution to one of the country's most
pressing problems.