Universities must take responsibility for declining levels of public trust in higher education, according to Yale Universityâs president after a wide-ranging inquiry found the institution needs to look again at fees, admissions and teaching practices to regain popular support.
Results of a year-long probe into why many Americans have lost faith in universities published on 15 April put the decline down to three broad factors; soaring prices, perceived unfairness around admissions and âissues about what is said and taught on university campusesâ including free speech and political bias concerns.
The committee of Yale academics tasked with the exercise has published 20 recommendations after its extensive investigation that involved in-depth consultation with the public and various stakeholders.
Among the most eye-catching is a call for a âdevice-free policyâ to be the default across the university, which means âno phones, laptops, or tabletsâŠin classroom settingsâ although exceptions could be made for âpedagogical, research, or practical reasonsâ.
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This is positioned as part of wider efforts to âre-center the classroomâ with faculty, students and administrators urged to make teaching âmore rigorous and rewarding, with the goal of cultivating sustained attention, intellectual curiosity, and disciplined habits of mindâ.
Beverly Gage, the John Lewis Gaddis professor of history at Yale, who co-chaired the inquiry, told Times Higher Education there had been âreally surprising levels of enthusiasmâ for the idea among students and faculty and her own experience of teaching a device-free class this year had been âreally positiveâ.
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Other recommendations include:
- That, over time, Yale substantially raises its household income limit for students who donât have to pay tuition fees
- That the institution does âeverything possible to make the financial aid system more comprehensible, predictable, and fairâ
- That the university introduces a minimum level of academic achievement in admissions either linked to SAT score or in the form of a Yale-specific entrance exam to ensure that the âtop priority in admissions decisions should be academic achievementâ
- That the university undertakes a âtransparent review of its administrative structureâ with a view to establishing a principle that it âshould be hard to administratively expand, and easy to contractâ
- That new principles of âacademic freedom for the 21st centuryâ are established and adopted by the institution.
The recommendations are being seen as both concrete steps the Ivy League institution can take on its own campus but also ones that can inform work at other universities and colleges to support the collective goal of rebuilding trust.
Responding to the report in a letter to faculty, Yale president Maurie McInnis accepted many of the recommendations and tasked committees with investigating others further.
On the reportâs call for universities to âtake responsibilityâ for the situation, McInnis writes that she âaccepts this judgment fullyâ.
âThis decline did not come out of nowhere, nor did it happen overnight. And we were certainly more than mere bystanders. We must acknowledge how we have fallen short.â
Speaking to reporters, McInnis said there had been a âsteady erosionâ in trust that had stretched over decades, and it was important universities undertook such âextended examinationsâ and be willing to be âunflinching in thinking about ourselvesâ.
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Gage said the goal of the report âwas to take the long view and acknowledge that public scepticism and distrust is something that is built over time and will take some time to reverseâ.
âWe are very committed to the idea of self-scrutiny andâŠmoving forward the strategy needs to be not just one of changed communications but one of real substantive action and self-critique.â
The university charged $69,900 (£50,000) a year in tuition this academic year with the full cost of attendance for the year put at $94,425, but many did not pay this sticker price because of discounting and scholarships.
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The report says alongside offering more free places to more students, the university should also âprovide a more accessible and reliable indication of the actual price that an undergraduate student will pay at the moment of enrollment and over the course of a four-year degreeâ.
Grade inflation is also flagged as an issue, compounded by the difficulties of comparing like-for-like across courses âsince grading practices vary across departments and programs â with some awarding A-range grades to about half of students and others to virtually all â grades are not comparable in any meaningful sense across coursesâ.
The Yale registrar is therefore recommended to devise a mechanism that reflects the context for each grade, and include them on student transcripts, a step that could be taken âimmediatelyâ.
On admissions, the committee identified a central problem with Yaleâs approach of informing âpotential students that everything matters, leaving applicants scrambling to second-guess what the university wantsâ, leaving many of the 96 per cent of applicants who are rejected confused and disappointed.
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The process would be made more âeffective and less onerous for applicants by establishing and making public a minimum standard of academic achievement necessary for considerationâ.
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