Jason Brennan and Phillip Magness have written an insightful work on what is wrong with higher education...I admire the work the authors have done. Anyone involved in higher education should read this book and take seriously its critiques.
Alexander W. Salter, The Review of Austrian Economics
Academics extol high-minded ideals, such as serving the common good and promoting social justice. Universities aim to be centers of learning that find the best and brightest students, treat them fairly, and equip them with the knowledge they need to lead better lives.
But as Jason Brennan and Phillip Magness show in Cracks in the Ivory Tower, American universities fall far short of this ideal. At almost every level, they find that students, professors, and administrators are guided by self-interest rather than ethical concerns. College bureaucratic structures also often incentivize and reward bad behavior, while disincentivizing and even punishing good behavior. Most students, faculty, and administrators are out to serve themselves and pass their costs onto others.
The problems are deep and pervasive: most academic marketing and advertising is semi-fraudulent. To justify their own pay raises and higher budgets, administrators hire expensive and unnecessary staff. Faculty exploit students for tuition dollars through gen-ed requirements. Students hardly learn anything and cheating is pervasive. At every level, academics disguise their pursuit of self-interest with high-faluting moral language.
Marshaling an array of data, Brennan and Magness expose many of the ethical failings of academia and in turn reshape our understanding of how such high power institutions run their business. Everyone knows academia is dysfunctional. Brennan and Magness show the problems are worse than anyone realized. Academics have only themselves to blame.
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Cracks in the Ivory Tower systematically shows how individuals-students, professors, and administrators-at contemporary American universities are guided by self-interest rather than ethical beliefs and the many negative effects this has on higher education.
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1. Neither Gremlins nor Poltergeists
2. What the Academics Really Want
3. Why Most Academic Advertising Is Immoral Bullshit
4. On Reading Entrails and Student Evaluations
5. Grades: Communication Breakdown
6. When Moral Language as a Cover for Self-Interest
7. The Gen Ed Hustle
8. Why Universities Produce Too Many PhDs
9. Cheaters, Cheaters Everywhere
10. Three Big Myths about What's Plaguing Higher Ed
11. Answering the Taxpayers
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"Jason Brennan and Phillip Magness have written an insightful work on what is wrong with higher education...I admire the work the authors have done. Anyone involved in higher education should read this book and take seriously its critiques." -- Alexander W. Salter, The Review of Austrian Economics
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Jason Brennan is the Flanagan Family Professor at Georgetown University. He is the author of ten books, including When All Else Fails and In Defense of Openness.
Phillip W. Magness is a Senior Research Fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. He is the author of two books and over a dozen scholarly articles on a diverse array of topics, including the economics of slavery, the history of international trade, federal tax policy, economic inequality, and the economic dimensions of higher education.
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Selling point: Provides a comprehensive account of why American academia is dysfunctional
Selling point: Offers evidence that most academic marketing is deeply immoral
Selling point: Examines at length what promises universities make and finds overwhelming evidence they fail to deliver
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197608272
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
485 gr
Høyde
159 mm
Bredde
236 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336