The Yale Report Won't Save American Higher Education
The report says rising costs, opaque admissions and free-speech concerns are driving distrust, while Yale proposes a minimum academic standard for applicants.
4 Articles
4 Articles
Hope or Hype? What to Make of Yale’s Report on Trust in Higher Ed
Earlier this month, Yale University’s ten-member Committee on Trust in Higher Education issued a bracing, 58-page report on what’s driven plunging trust in higher ed. The committee was formed a year ago by Yale president Maurie McInnis amidst Trump 2.0’s early onslaught. McInnis charged the committee with determining why confidence in higher ed was at an all-time low and what to do about it. As McInnis wrote in her introduction to the report, “U…
Why Americans Don’t Trust Higher Education
Higher education has been buzzing about a new report from Yale University on the decline of public trust in colleges and universities. The report is unexpectedly self-flagellatory, which is why it’s earned hyperbolic headlines since its release. (“Yale report savages Ivy League schools for destroying trust in higher education,” blared Fortune.) Many of the report’s recommendations, drafted by a 10-member committee, will no doubt improve Yale’s i…
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