Academic System in American Society

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A01=Alain Touraine
Academic Self-image
Academic System
American Academic System
American Academic World
American Chemical Society
Author_Alain Touraine
Average State University
Black Movement
Category=JNA
Catholic Colleges
Clark Kerr
Contest Mobility
educational inequality
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Free Speech Movement
higher education reform
Jackson State
Junior Colleges
Kerr's Idea
Kerr’s Idea
knowledge and power
labor market outcomes
Liberal Arts Colleges
movement
Social Reproduction
social stratification
sociology of academic institutions
Staten Island Community College
student
Student Movement
university governance
West Germany
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138534056
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Although the period of student protests of the 1960s and 1970s has long passed, Alain Touraine argues, in this wide-ranging and vigorous essay, that the period's problems remain with us. Higher degrees have become less and less valuable on the labor market and the demand for academic reform has become more intense. Community colleges still try to provide equal educational opportunities for the poor and the minorities, without much success. And the university has not yet resolved the conflict between being the home of impartial inquiry and research and serving constituent interests.

Touraine views American higher education as a system within a definite, though changing, social context. He compares U.S. student movements with those of other countries. He is skeptical about the way Americans view the relationships between the university and what he regards as the ruling forces of the society, between knowledge and power, between production and education. He offers no facile solutions, but he presents an exciting, nontraditional analysis of the social and political forces that have shaped the modern history of higher education.

In the new introduction, Clark Kerr contrasts his own views as an American observer to those of Touraine as a French intellectual. He asserts that the family, not higher education, is the most important "school" in the process of reproducing society. Kerr places more emphasis than does Touraine on the labor market, on the production functions (training of skills and advancing technology) of the vast nonelite segments of American higher education, on the long-term impacts of science in changing society, and on scholarly criticism in affecting transformations, and places less emphasis on sporadic political protests by faculty and students.

He agrees with Touraine however, in his two great themes: (1) that you cannot understand the academic system unless you first understand society; and (2) that the rise of the university must be understood to understand modern society, where "knowledge is power." This volume will be important to all those interested in higher education, whether as participants or observers.

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