"Should STEM Be Our First Priority?"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“Should STEM Be Our First Priority?”
September 24, 2015
The
short answer is ‘no.’ At least, that is my opinion. We all agree that STEM
courses (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are vital to the
world we live in. But today’s emphasis on those four disciplines presumes
knowledge about the future that is impossible to know. New industries will
start up in the next fifteen to twenty years. Students who have specialized in
STEM subjects may have an advantage today, but who among us knows what jobs
will be in demand ten or twenty years from now? Some businesses will produce products
and provide services we cannot envision today. Twenty-five years ago, did most
educators anticipate the revolution in marketing that was a consequence of the
internet? Was it more important that Jeff Bezos understood differential
calculus, or was his success a product of being able to conceive of and
conceptualize a form of selling to consumers that had never before existed?
The
purpose of education, beginning with the basics of reading, writing and
arithmetic (what my parent’s generation knew as the three ‘R’s), is to
stimulate the mind – to encourage the quest for knowledge, to learn to
challenge and question, to appreciate the joy of learning. A liberal arts
college is not a trade school. It is an incubator for ideas. College should
provide a forum that allows students to ingest and process myriad ideas. There
are guidelines for graduating seniors, but there are no roadmaps, as each life
lived is different and job opportunities tomorrow may be in areas we cannot
conceive of today. A good education should help young people learn to maximize
their strengths and to understand and compensate for their weaknesses. It
should help enable them to adapt to a changing environment. Accurate statistics
are hard to come by, but data from the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor
Statistics suggest that the average person will have about ten jobs during
their working life.
The
focus on STEM courses has come to the fore because of the political concern
over rising income inequalities and because we know that jobs have gone begging
for lack of qualified applicants. The emphasis is understandable. But, besides
presuming to know an unknowable future, it presupposes an equality in students
that does not exist. Ability, aspiration and dedication are qualities that differ
among all of us. While the work done by Nobel Prize winner Roger Sperry in the
late 1970s on Left Brain-Right Brain theory has been largely dismissed, there
is no question that people vary in their abilities in regard to logic, numbers
and rational reasoning. Schools and colleges (and students, of course) need to
focus on each individual’s talents. The opportunity to study STEM courses
should be available to all, but so should the opportunity to study English and
Philosophy.
While
I don’t believe a college education is necessary for all, research suggests
that it can increase social mobility. A recent study from the Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco
showed that children who are born into the poorest fifth of income distribution
are six times as likely to reach the top fifth if they graduate from college. I
also believe that learning and knowledge leads to greater happiness, an often
overlooked but important advantage of education.
However,
the assumption that universal college education will magically reverse income
distribution is a myth told by politicians who live in a world of sound bites.
There is a pyramid shape to all of our lives. Every business has one chief
executive. Our country has one President and each state has one Governor. There
is a hierarchy in our schools and colleges, just as there is in the military.
It is true in all human endeavors, just as it is in the animal kingdom. Who has
not heard of alpha dogs or queen bees? Who has not witnessed the lead duck in a
V-formation as they migrate south or north? There will always be a few leaders
and many followers.
We
hear calls for more equality in terms of outcomes. But that is a siren call of
populism, rather than a realistic policy recommendation. Are income and wealth
spreads too big? Who’s to say? The gaps may be wider than forty years ago, but
history shows the spreads are nowhere near as wide as they were 100, 300 or 500
years ago. History also shows the gap is far wider in Communist and
totalitarian regimes than in democracies. We cannot all be rich, and we will
not all be poor. I never ran a company, but, as grandparents, my wife and I now
sit atop the apex of our family pyramid – a position we achieved, not because
of “fairness,” but because of mutual love and longevity. And, yes, it was
something to which we aspired.
The
more important area of focus should be ensuring that colleges remain
classically liberal. Ironically, the biggest threat comes from those
institutions that consider themselves most liberal, an example being the University of California . According to Heather
MacDonald, in the magazine City, the
regents of the UC are devising “principles against intolerance,” to protect the
University’s core principles of “respect, inclusion and academic freedom.”
Those principles would seem to be ones with which all reasonable people would
agree. But, as Ms. MacDonald wrote, “Any university run as a meritocracy will
be naturally inclusive of anyone who brings intellectual talent and rigor to
the institution.” “Respect,” as she noted, “is ordinarily earned by
intellectually solid research.” Any university that bars from speaking those of
differing ideas is, definitionally, intolerant. In fact, what the University is
doing is erecting roadblocks that would inhibit speech and behavior when they
are deemed antithetical to the beliefs of the institutions’ administrators and
professors. For example, using the term “America is a land of opportunity”
is considered a racial microaggression, as it is seen as an attack on certain
“victim” groups.
“Trigger
warnings” have become a favorite of the Left. In last Sunday’s New York
Times, Kate Manne, an assistant professor at Cornell wrote an op-ed, “Why I
Use Trigger Warnings.” She wrote: “The idea [for trigger warnings] was to flag
content that depicted or discussed common causes of trauma, like military
combat, child abuse, incest or sexual violence. People, then could choose
whether or not to engage with this material.” The problem is that in living our
lives we do not always have that choice. We must be able to confront the
unpleasant as well as the pleasant. The horrors of the Holocaust leap from the
pages of Babi Yar .
It may offend, but in its words are universal lessons. Huckleberry Finn may have language that some find offensive, but in
ignoring it students are deprived of a moral story told with action and humor –
a slice of life in mid 19th Century America . Are we better off to be
comforted, but ignorant?
The
first priority of education should be to ensure graduates have the ability to
think independently and to reason out problems. History and literature are the
best manuals in understanding human behavior. Education should prepare youth
for a future unknown.
Labels: TOTD
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