An eye-opening look at how parents’ mistrust of colleges has less to
do with what their kids are learning than with whom they come to
trust. Higher education is a familiar battlefield in today’s
culture wars. The right accuses colleges and universities of
indoctrinating conservative students with liberal values; the left,
with failing to be sufficiently inclusive. The anxieties expressed on
both sides of the political spectrum have much in common, however, and
they are triggered not by colleges’ failures but by their successes.
So argues philosopher Anthony Simon Laden in Networks of Trust. He
highlights how a college education shapes students’ informational
trust networks: the complex set of people and institutions they rely
on for the information they use to think about and understand the
world. While the networks that colleges build for students have great
value, learning to inhabit them pulls some students away from their
families and communities. If many people distrust institutions of
higher education, this is one reason why. Networks of Trust offers a
path forward, one that preserves the value while reducing the harms of
a college education. It includes concrete suggestions for how colleges
and universities can educate students in a manner that inspires and
deserves trust: one that bridges rather than deepens our social
divides.
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The Social Costs of College and What We Can Do about Them
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226837185
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter