Friday, June 10, 2022

Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life

 

Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life 

by William Deresiewicz

https://smile.amazon.com/Excellent-Sheep-Miseducation-American-Meaningful/dp/1476702721/ref=sr_1_1?crid=R01SRGXPI0IM&keywords=excellent+sheep+by+william+deresiewicz&qid=1654903661&s=books&sprefix=Excellent+Sheep%2Cstripbooks%2C109&sr=1-1

This critique of the elite higher education system is an excellent book by a former Yale English professor that should be read by every university president, college admissions officer, and student headed to college, because it applies to all colleges in some degree. This does not mean that it is without bias. In my view, the major problem with higher education today is the indoctrination of students in the PC-progressive world view. Deresiewicz either doesn’t notice this or thinks it is how things should be, because he is a progressive. Universities believe in every kind of diversity except diversity of opinion. Saying anything not PC in the prevailing zeitgeist is the quickest way out of the university for a student or a professor. Thomas Sowell, PhD says, “The next time some academics tell you how important diversity is, ask how many Republicans there are in their sociology department.”

 

With a school-teacher father, I didn’t have the money or academic background to think about college. I made the best decision of my like; I enlisted in the United States Marine Corps after high school in 1964. If you want diversity and an education in people very different from you, the Corps is the place. You will meet real people solving real problems. I learned more there than in college.

 

Following Vietnam, I left the Corps to go to college, planning a political career, earning an AA in Liberal Arts and a BA in government. I had to take the SATs to get in, and four years after my dismal high school efforts, I scored in the 95/98 percentile. A counselor at MWCC advised me to apply to Clark University, but I didn’t want the debt and went to University of Massachusetts. When I was at U-Mass in 1970, there were two Republicans on the political science faculty. The rest were Democrats or Socialists. It is probably worse now. We undergrads knew we were there to pay the bills, as few resources we devoted to teaching. I found better instructors at both MWCC and Fitchburg State, where I earned a masters’ in history. (Only because I love history.)

 

The year I graduated from U-Mass, I was elected to the Massachusetts State Senate. I was the only U-Mass grad in the body. I served five terms, earning my masters’ at night, and spending six more years in the Marine Reserves. And I retired undefeated to become an association executive, a career that was good to me until I was forced to retire in 2013 to have a lung transplant. I am Deresiewicz’s ideal; a student who set my own course. At 76, I continue to educate myself, reading at least a book a week, and continuously writing, including over 400 life stories for vets at the VA.

 

I recommend you read Deresiewicz’s book, but think about both it and what I say with a skeptic’s heart. Still, I wish I’d had a course with him. Maybe he should apply for a position at a small public college?

No comments:

Post a Comment