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The Lowering of Higher Education in America

Autor Jackson Toby
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 sep 2017
Few in the United States will dispute the assumption that every high school graduate should be entitled to go to college regardless of financial need. But should everyone be able to go regardless of academic preparedness? Jackson Toby explores the idea that federal financial aid programs, all of which peg student aid to need alone and not to academic performance, are dragging down college admissions and academic standards to the point where America's schools, students, and economy will no longer be globally competitive.After a half-century of teaching, distinguished educator Jackson Toby concludes that our current system all too often gives both high school and college students the impression that college is an entitlement and not a challenge. The Lowering of Higher Education: Why Student Loans Should Be Based on Credit Worthiness is Toby's unflinching look at this broken system and the ways it can be fixed. This volume documents just how far college admission standards have fallen and measures the cost of remedial programs designed to get underprepared high school students to the level they should have been at in the first place.Toby is both pointed and frank in his discussion on the issue of grade inflation, which rewards laziness while demoralizing hard-working students. To reverse the national decline of academic standards in American colleges, Toby proposes a radical solution: Let federal student aid be tied to academic performance as well as financial need, incentivizing students to develop serious attitudes and study habits in high school and keep them up in college.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138536654
ISBN-10: 1138536652
Pagini: 228
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Cuprins

1: How Colleges Undermine High School Education; 2: Maximizing Access to College Maximizes the Enrollment of Underprepared Students; 3: How Grade Inflation Undermines Academic Achievement; 4: Goofing Off at College; 5: Is College Graduation Enough for a Good Job, or Do College Graduates Have to Know Something?; 6: The Perils of the Financial Aid Labyrinth; 7: How a Change in Public Policy can Improve American College Education; Afterword

Descriere

Few in the United States will dispute the assumption that every high school graduate should be entitled to go to college regardless of financial need

Notă biografică

Jackson Toby taught sociology and criminology at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ, for fifty years.

Recenzii

Toby has seen higher education change greatly over the decades. In his new book The Lowering of Higher Education in America (Praeger), he pulls no punches in explaining how the mania for promoting "access" to college for as many people as possible has driven down academic standards and expectations. It's unconventional thinking par excellence.
Toby, a retired professor of sociology and criminology at Rutgers U., contends that financial assistance for college should be based on academic performance. He describes how colleges weaken education by giving students a sense of entitlement; how they make it easy for too many underprepared students to get accepted; what the costs of underprepared students are; how grade inflation undermines academic achievement; how students spend their time at college and how this affects retention rates; whether attending college improves job prospects; how federal grants and loans have universalized financial aid; and how public policy should change.
"Jackson's new book The Lowering of Higher Education in America is a gem. . . . Run, do not walk, to your bookstore (or on-line provider) and buy Jackson's book." -- collegeaffordability.blogspot.com
.an excellent book.This one is on numerous ACTA staff members' personal reading lists, and we recommend it most highly!
The book is well organized, with the chapters building Toby's case in a logically progressive manner. Moreover, his section headings are clear, rather than cryptic or cutesy, and these headings are often stated as research questions, making it easy for readers to follow his argument.