Today's post will ask some preliminary questions. First, how did we get to this present place in which a four-year or advanced college degree is no longer a guarantee of stable, middle-class employment? To answer this question, we will need to answer the following questions:
- What was the original purpose of college? Note that the word "college" comes from the Latin word collegium, defined by Wiktionary as "colleagueship (connection of associates, colleagues, etc.", guild, corporation, company, ... (persons united by the same office or calling or living by some common set of rules), college (several senses), school ..."
- What did the world's first colleges look like? You may not know this, but one of the world's oldest continuously operating universities is the University of Ez-Zitouna, which was founded in Tunisia on the African Continent. What was the mission of the world's first and earliest universities, and how was that mission funded and carried out? How did the roles of education and research interact?
- What was the origin of the system of public universities in the United States? (For instance, what was the role of the presidency of Abraham Lincoln in the birth of American public universities?)
- What are the origins of the for-profit college or university, and how did these institutions cause the purpose of college to mutate over time?
- How has the decline in public and private funding for basic research affected the employment landscape for academics? (You may not know this, but the United States no longer has any major corporately-funded laboratories dedicated to pure research. Bell Labs, which was responsible for the discovery of radio astronomy and many other scientific breakthroughs, is now a wholly-owned subsidiary of Nokia, a Finnish corporation.)
- What is the impact of declining numbers of youth and declining college enrollment on universities and colleges?
- How will the defunding of public colleges and universities affect the future of those nations such as the United States which pursue rabidly conservative "free-market" principles? See, for instance, "Modeling research universities: Predicting probable futures of public vs. private and large vs. small research universities", 2018.
- What can college-educated members of the precariat (especially those college-educated who have been historically marginalized, such as people of color) do both individually and collectively to create a better situation for themselves? For the present-day contraction of opportunities for the college-educated is being orchestrated by the present masters of our society in an attempt to maintain and amplify existing inequality. What steps can we therefore take to create our own alternative spaces of collective self-reliance?
I hope to answer these questions (maybe with a little help from some friends) during the next few posts in this series. I'd like to end with something that's somewhat related to this series of posts and to other posts which I've written for this blog over the last four or five years, namely, another link to a short fiction story which I recently enjoyed. The name of the story is "Tempus Fugit" and the author is Ketty Steward.
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