Academic Revolution

Regular price €55.99
A01=Christopher Jencks
A01=David Riesman
academic meritocracy
Academic Profession
Academic Revolution
Author_Christopher Jencks
Author_David Riesman
Category=JNK
Category=JNM
Catholic Colleges
Catholic Higher Education
Christopher Jencks
Colonial Colleges
Community College Movement
Commuter College
David Riesman
educational stratification
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Extracurricular
General Education Movement
generational conflict studies
High School
Higher Education
higher education policy
Home Towns
Junior Colleges
Liberal Arts
Liberal Arts Colleges
Liberal Arts Professors
Life Style
Morrill Act
Negro Colleges
Nineteenth Century Colleges
non-Catholic Colleges
professionalization of faculty
Protestant Colleges
Senior High School
social mobility research
transformation of American universities
Undergraduate Education
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765801159
  • Weight: 748g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Academic Revolution describes the rise to power of professional scholars and scientists, first in America's leading universities and now in the larger society as well. Without attempting a full-scale history of American higher education, it outlines a theory about its development and present status. It is illustrated with firsthand observations of a wide variety of colleges and universities the country over-colleges for the rich and colleges for the upwardly mobile; colleges for vocationally oriented men and colleges for intellectually and socially oriented women; colleges for Catholics and colleges for Protestants; colleges for blacks and colleges for rebellious whites.

The authors also look at some of the revolution's consequences. They see it as intensifying conflict between young and old, and provoking young people raised in permissive, middle-class homes to attacks on the legitimacy of adult authority. In the process, the revolution subtly transformed the kinds of work to which talented young people aspire, contributing to the decline of entrepreneurship and the rise of professionalism. They conclude that mass higher education, for all its advantages, has had no measurable effect on the rate of social mobility or the degree of equality in American society.

Jencks and Riesman are not nostalgic; their description of the nineteenth-century liberal arts colleges is corrosively critical. They maintain that American students know more than ever before, that their teachers are more competent and stimulating than in earlier times, and that the American system of higher education has brought the American people to an unprecedented level of academic competence. But while they regard the academic revolution as having been an historically necessary and progressive step, they argue that, like all revolutions, it can devour its children. For Jencks and Riesman, academic professionalism is an advance over amateur gentility, but they warn of its dangers and limitations: the elitism and arrogance implicit in meritocracy, the myopia that derives from a strictly academic view of human experience and understanding, the complacency that comes from making technical competence an end rather than a means.

Christopher Jencks is Malcolm Wiener Professor of Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He is the author of Rethinking Social Policy: Race, Poverty and the Underclass, The Homeless, and co-editor of The Black-White Text Score Gap. David Riesman is Henry Ford II Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Harvard University. He is the author of Thorstein Veblen, Abundance for What. The Lonely Crowd, and Variety in American Education.