That's a finding from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI).
A
comment (6:47pm) on Immoral Minority led me to ISI's
website with a civic literacy test.
First, a random sample of 2,508 American adults of all backgrounds was
surveyed, allowing comparisons to be made between the college and
non-college educated. They were asked 33 straightforward civics
questions, many of which high school graduates and new citizens are
expected to know.
The average score was 49% right answers. College professors got 55% right.
Of the 2,508 People surveyed, 164 say they
have held an elected government office at least once in their life.
Their average score on the civic literacy test is 44%, compared to 49%
for those who have not held an elected office. (From additional finding.)
But don't gloat too much. We don't know what level office they held and the 49% - the average - got an F grade from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI) which created the test.
One of their major findings was: College Adds Little to Civic Knowledge.
Red flags are starting to wave for me. One of the agenda items of the Right has been bashing American colleges and universities - because they've strayed from traditional Western Civilization curriculum and added women, non-whites, and studies of sexuality beyond the missionary position. Colleges are places where people are supposed to learn how to think independently. If the quality of this year's roster of Republican presidential candidates is any indication, independent thinking is not a quality conservatives want in the people who vote.
Just like
No Child Left Behind was designed for public schools to fail by setting up a testing system that makes it very hard for schools to pass so they can imprint in people's minds that public education as a failure, there appears to be a similar agenda for the college level. For K-12, this destroying trust in public education is designed to get the public to vote for school vouchers and move public money into private schools.
It appears that part of the motivation of this test is to show that US Colleges are failing.
Is ISI part of this? I started checking.
The ISI declares itself "The Home of American Intellectual Conservatism."
A Katherine Forrest, in 2006, had the same sort of suspicions I'm having and posted
Exposing the Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
ISI's veneer of objectivity and rationality disappears completely when you find their college rating pages. (You have to look carefully to find at the bottom of each page this note:
They
list ten "Exceptional Schools" and ten "Train Wreck Schools."
What the train wreck schools seem to have in common is courses on gay and feminist themes and other evidence of what ISI sees as far left ideological intolerance. Here are some examples:
#1 Train Wreck School, Wesleyan University:
". . .Wesleyan has been hollowed out by curricular decay and campus politics.
Key requirements can be checked off by a vast array of questionable
courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key
Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.” There is
little intellectual diversity in the classroom or elsewhere. Shakespeare
is optional for English majors, as is study of the American founding
and Civil War for history majors"
#3 Train Wreck School, College of the Holy Cross:
". . .The sole required religion course need not cover Jesuit, Catholic, or even Christian content: Islam or Buddhism will do. . ."
#5 Train Wreck School, University of California Santa Cruz:
Bastions of fanatical political correctness include feminist studies
and also American studies, where representative courses include “Sexual
Identities,” “Social Unrest,” and “Criminal Queer.” Santa Cruz boasts
that it offers more than a hundred courses each year that focus entirely
on race and ethnicity. It might save time simply to count the courses
that don’t. The once-tiny Santa Cruz College Republicans chapter has
simply disappeared, although there is a libertarian group, Slugs for
Liberty. “This is a very liberal campus,” says a student, “[and]
religion does not play a role.”
#6 Train Wreck is Duke, which actually gets high praise for liberal but fair faculty and the quality of research and many programs. But it gets slammed for:
". . . the infamous lacrosse case of
2006, when an African American stripper falsely accused three Duke
lacrosse players of rape—and eighty-eight Duke professors rushed to
condemn the innocent students in the Chronicle of Higher Education.
As one student tells us, faculty and administrators are still fixated
on “race, gender, and class.” In the wake of the “rape” charade, Duke
adopted a new, draconian sexual misconduct policy that “can render a
student guilty of nonconsensual sex simply because he or she is
considered ‘powerful’ on campus,” warned the Foundation for Individual
Rights in Education. "
#7 Train Wreck is Bryn Mawr.
"History majors are not even offered—much less required to take—a basic
Western civilization class. Many of the college’s humanities courses are
dedicated to feminist issues and the politics of victimhood, such as
“The Sociology of AIDS” covering the “social construction of AIDS”;
“Anxious Masculinity” (an English class); and “African Childhoods,”
which provides a “gendered perspective . . . Concerning indigenous
cultural practices such as initiation ceremonies and sexual
orientation.” Radical groups predominate on campus, presenting a
feminist “May Hole” instead of a May Pole, and celebrating Wiccan
Sabbats."
#9 Train Wreck is Occidental College.
“Gay Rights in the Era of Obama and Google”
That’s the title of a real, core curriculum course at this urban
school, where President Obama went for two years and awakened his
political consciousness. Students could find an excellent liberal arts
education by carefully picking their courses, if they don’t mind
immersion in an almost exclusively liberal, largely intolerant school.
Their study methodology includes frequent references like, "says a faculty member."
What's the common theme for the top ten "Exceptional Schools"? Basically, conservatism, marked by traditional curriculum (mostly dead white male authors on the reading list, I'm guessing), religion (Christian) and/or military heritage.
1. Princeton University -
". . . Of all the elite colleges, Princeton is the least politicized.
Issue-driven organizations are diverse and mostly high-minded, and
chaplaincies of many denominations are active and faithful. While the
faculty overall leans left, most keep their views out of the classroom.
The school makes room for the excellent James Madison program, a
conservative institute dedicated to American political philosophy. . ."
2. University of Chicago -
". . .While some departments are slanted politically, this doesn’t seep into
the classroom; students of a wide range of views describe the atmosphere
as comfortable and open-minded. Strong disciplines include economics,
social thought, political science, and the hard sciences. Chaplaincies
are strong here, and opportunities to savor the fine arts abound. The
gritty [code for "black"?] neighborhood surrounding the school doesn’t encourage much urban
adventure: crime is a real issue. . ."
3. University of the South
". . .Faculty lean to the left of students—a largely conservative, southern
lot—but classroom bias is rare and free discussion the rule. Students
form close, lifelong friendships in the charmed, safe isolation of
Sewanee’s campus, and alumni are fiercely loyal. Religious life on
campus is strong, extending well beyond the school’s official,
high-toned Episcopalianism. . . ."
4. US Military Academy
". . . The discipline and focus imparted through the school’s rigorous Military
Program help form many future business leaders. West Point’s core
curriculum is excellent, and the art, philosophy, and literature (APL)
major provides an in-depth study of Western civilization. History and
government majors are particularly strong, focused respectively on
military history and the American tradition. . . Following our tradition of an apolitical military, the school
keeps overt ideology out of the classroom, and students avoid partisan
politics. Student debate, writing, and arts opportunities are strong.
Religious life of many varieties thrives, with several historic chapels
and talented choirs."
5. Pepperdine University -
"This well-heeled, large university that overlooks the beach is
affiliated with the Churches of Christ, and remains remarkably true to
the entrepreneurial aspirations of its founder and namesake, George
Pepperdine. It aims at cultivating a pragmatic graduate who infuses
Christian values in a life of leadership. Pepperdine’s interdisciplinary
curriculum is strong; its three-course core sequence, Western Heritage,
takes students briskly from 30,000 B.C. up through the present. . ."
6. Baylor University - "the world’s largest Baptist university'
7. Providence College - " Dominican friars (Aquinas’s order) who are serious about Catholic education"
8. Texas A&M - "Originally an all-male military academy (it still has a large, influential corps of cadets. . . conservative churches and chaplaincies are thriving"
9. Gordon College - "New England’s only traditional, Evangelical Christian liberal arts college"
10. Christendom College -
"Instead of political correctness, there is an absolute expectation of
Catholic orthodoxy; debates on campus are among Republicans,
anticapitalist agrarians, libertarians, paleoconservatives, and
monarchists. Shared premises make such disputes more fruitful."
I'd also note that while there were three colleges I noted on the Exceptional list that had been all male, the Train Wreck list has two all female schools.
But does all this make the test invalid? As with No Child Left Behind, you can set up a test that doesn't necessarily have questions that are critical to being good American citizens. Or a scoring system that guarantees failure. Some of the questions are clearly important. Others, while identifying significant points in American history, aren't necessarily indicative, overall, of whether the American public gets an F in civil literacy. These folks like traditional education, so they make up a test and use a traditional grading scale of >90%= A etc. But what makes these 33 questions the key ones that lead to the F for the average American?
And I still have trouble with their finding that "College Adds Little to Civic Knowledge" because:
The
average score among those who ended their formal education with a
bachelor’s degree is 57%, or an “F.”
Who picked the 33 questions? Look, I can criticize the low quality of American colleges as well as anyone. My students complained regularly about the amount of work I expected of them. And, just in case anyone is wondering, I did way better than the average on the test. But it was a subject I know a lot about and covered a lot of history I lived through.
I agree that Americans know way too little about how government works. I don't necessarily agree with ISI's reasoning why. I'd argue it has more to do with the annual assaults on school budgets for the last 40 years or the emphasis on research which focuses faculty attention away from teaching. Or the overemphasis on college education and away from vocational education.
I would guess that I could pick some 20 somethings in Anchorage who could come up with a similar test, focused on critical modern technical literacy, which the people at ISI would fail.
If you are interested, you can
take their test here. How well will you score?