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ACTA’s Hero of Intellectual Freedom award was presented to Roland G. Fryer, Jr., professor of economics at Harvard University.
A new study says Idaho is failing its students at public universities and colleges by increasing tuition, not requiring a broad range of coursework, and limiting the free exchange of ideas.
The report card from the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) and Idaho Freedom Foundation has several prescriptions for schools. It recommends that four-year public institutions require students to take seven courses it calls a core curriculum: English composition, literature, foreign language, math, economics, science, and U.S. government or history. The study also suggests that schools reduce administrative spending rather than money going to student instruction.
“Idahoans depend on their universities to ensure students have a functional knowledge of core subjects,” the study says. “They depend on these universities to be places where ideas and opinions are expressed freely and explored with academic integrity.”
The study did give a passing grade to the Idaho State Board of Education’s structure and transparency, though it found fault with its actions to improve academic quality and control costs.
ACTA has issued similar report cards to public universities in Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri and Georgia, also giving those states F’s for cost and intellectual diversity. ACTA’s Heather Lakemacher, one of the co-authors of the report, will meet with state policymakers Wednesday and Thursday to discuss the findings, which include a survey of University of Idaho students, in which a majority of students say some course readings present only one side of a controversial issue.
ACTA’s Hero of Intellectual Freedom award was presented to Roland G. Fryer, Jr., professor of economics at Harvard University.
In this episode of Higher Ed Now, the second of two conversations devoted to core texts, ACTA’s Academic Affairs Fellow Veronica Bryant speaks in Spanish with Clemente Cox, classics and philosophy scholar and the Academic Director of the Center of General Studies at the Universidad de los Andes.
Fall is a wonderful time at Furman University. Friends are reuniting after a summer apart. The mall is teeming with football tailgates. The leaves are just beginning to turn. All on one of the most beautiful college campuses in the country. It should be an ideal place to learn and grow.
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