Sunday, March 8, 2015

Moving to a Standardized College Education -Times Are Changing




Moving to a Standardized College Education
-Times Are Changing

This week Sweet Briar College announced that it would close in August 2015.  Sweet Briar’s decision came with methodical analysis and took my breath away.

I did not attend Sweet Briar or have any association with the institution; however, to me, Sweet Briar’s closing is a warning to American higher education to consider some significant questions such as
o   What is our purpose?
o   Why are we here?
o   Who are we serving?

As an Assessment Specialist, I often prompt others to think about the question of purpose so the Sweet Briar announcement elicited a level of emotion for which I was not prepared. 

Why did this small, private, women’s liberal arts college stir emotion with me who was far away at a state, regional institution?

The answer, while complicated, is seated in my work for many years in college student identity.

While Sweet Briar played by all the rules, the internal hippie in me balks at the standardization I perceive to be at the root cause of the school’s closure. 

The media, law (policy) makers, and the general public (of which 20% have a Bachelor’s degree according to the 2014 census.gov website) desire an ability to compare certain information across a wide array of institutions.

A problem with standard metrics, such as the one’s institutions now must submit to accrediting agencies and for-profit websites in order to “play the game,” is that they strip the institution of identity (for the sake of easy comparison.)

You can compare my standard statistics to those of Christie Brinkley:
o   We are both blonde
o   We are both mothers
o   We are both 5’9”
However, others would argue that our similarities end there!  Christie is a long-time vegetarian who models and has been married four times. 

I am less the supermodel and more the super nerd, eat meat, and married the love of my life at 19.  Few would argue for the standardization of metrics so they could compare me with Ms. Brinkley.

So why do we demand such standardization for colleges and universities who are just as unique?

Websites such as collegeportraits.org or the StudentAchievementMeasures.org, or even school sponsored sites such as analytics.tamus.edu request submission of metrics, which standardize institutions as unique as Christie and I.

How does one portray “fit” which is a fundamental element of success for a college student?

How does an institution describe culture when using numbers and percentages? 

Is this the most appropriate engagement of the public’s time and resources?

Is this an effort to standardize education similar to that of the European Union with the Bologna Process?

Regardless of the intent, we need to slow down and refocus on bigger questions!

Sweet Briar College served 700 unique, individual students who found Sweet Briar to fit their unique identities.  These students who we say we serve, may not be a fit for other institutions.

For a country priding itself on the diversity of its offerings, this move seems to limit student choice for the future.  After generations have been educated and formed their identity at Sweet Briar, the likes of the mother of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, Janet Bouvier, Jean Oliver Sarton (artist), and Molly Haskell (feminist film critic). 

Are we, as a collective people, willing to give up on women like them?  Are we willing to lose a future Diana Muldour or Elaine Dundy for the sake of mindless comparison?

Is it worth is to not have to examine, investigate, and crunch your own numbers?

In assessment we like to begin with the questions of why are you here?  What is your purpose?  Thus I inquire of the American higher educational system—what is your purpose?

·               Have we taken the standardization train as far as we can go?

·               Have we just stepped over the line?

Did we really just end a 114-year history? 


Sometimes closure is a good thing—but I believe we are at a point for close examination of costs and benefit…..and purpose.

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