America’s higher education consensus is breaking up: responding to Paul Tough
What happens to academia and society if we stop thinking higher education is for everyone?
A new entry into this emerging line of thought comes from Paul Tough, who recently published a powerful article in the New York Times. “Americans Are Losing Faith in the Value of College. Whose Fault is That?” covers a lot of ground, and I’d like to engage with it here. He also spoke to the topic on a New York Times podcast.
Tough gets a lot of things right in this article, chiming in with my own work. He identifies the swerve away from “college for everyone,” a move that I’ve previously called the shattered consensus. He points to polls showing American support for higher education going down (here’s another example). He notes the decade-long enrollment decline. He catches how grad school can backfire economically (for students in some fields and/or schools).
Tough addresses the awful amount of student debt. He hits on rising tuition and fees, nicely including some variations on that often oversimplified topic. He correctly identifies the combination of taking college classes, getting into debt, and not graduating as one of the worst academic experiences a person can undertake. He also pays attention to the importance of major for lifetime earnings, the widening partisan divide over academia, and how college can play a role as a finishing school for the elite.