Research Catalog
The fall of the ivory tower : government funding, corruption, and the bankrupting of American higher education
- Title
- The fall of the ivory tower : government funding, corruption, and the bankrupting of American higher education / George Roche.
- Author
- Roche, George Charles.
- Publication
- Washington, D.C. : Regnery Publishing, 1994.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | LB2342.4.U6 R63 1994 | Off-site |
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Details
- Description
- x, 310 pages; 24 cm
- Summary
- In the most devastating critique of American higher education ever produced, author George Roche explains how and why the smoke screen of success in America's institutions of higher education mask huge deficits, overpaid administrators and professors, and dismal standards of education.
- American colleges and universities are the envy of the world. They are prided for offering the finest education available. But do they live up to their reputation? The Fall of the Ivory Tower proves they do not, largely for one reason - government funding. For decades, money from the government has encouraged schools to overspend, overstaff, and overbuild. It has subsidized skyrocketing tuition, fiscal mismanagement, and institutional corruption.
- Ultimately, it has forced many colleges and universities to change their top priority from educating undergraduates to attracting government funds.
- In spite of the massive infusion of money - including federal aid, which has doubled over the last few years - Dr. Roche reports that "tens of thousands of students don't know when Columbus sailed to the New World, who wrote the Declaration of Independence, or when the Civil War was fought.
- Businesses complain that they have to re-educate college graduates in the basics of math and English, and parents protest that tuition costs are far beyond their ability to pay." Government subsidy has created an academic welfare state that will have to suffer radical change if America's educational institutions are to survive.
- The Fall of the Ivory Tower explains how and why the nationwide financial crisis that threatens to put many institutions out of business may become good news by offering an opportunity to restore authority and accountability to their most valuable asset - the student.
- Subject
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Contents
- Foreword / Malcolm S. Forbes, Jr. -- 1. Colleges in Crisis -- 2. Government and Higher Education -- 3. Government Funding Today -- 4. The Politics of Funding -- 5. Federal Funding and Federal Control -- 6. Mismanagement and Corruption -- 7. Soaring Tuitions, Soaring Costs -- 8. The College Curriculum and Political Correctness -- 9. The Faculty and the College Community -- 10. Who Controls the Campus - Who Controls the Future? -- Epilogue: Rebuilding the Ivory Tower.
- ISBN
- 0895264870
- LCCN
- 93047561
- OCLC
- ocm29564352
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries