Wednesday, November 15, 2023

THE NEOLIBERAL UNIVERSITY: THE PURDUE EXAMPLE

Harry Targ

 

(Part of a larger paper entitled “The Crisis of Higher Education in the Era of Neoliberal Globalizationpublished in Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 19 (2020) 127-137).


A prominent Big Ten university, Purdue, has led the process of transforming itself into a model neoliberal university, in keeping with the Koch Brothers/ ALEC model of education. The transformation of Purdue University has involved significant changes including privatization of public control of the institution; moving into the increasingly competitive online education market; shifting programs away from an educational mix of science, technology, the social sciences, and humanities to more STEM and less liberal arts; currying the favor of huge corporations and enlarged Department of Defense contracts; establishing programs whereby wealthy alumni fund students’ education with contractual guarantees by which students pay back the alums; and the establishment at the university of a country club ambience to attract students.

 

As to increasing Purdue’s connections with the corporate sector and the military, Purdue’s Discovery Park launched a nanotechnology center in 2001 with a grant from the state of Indiana and expanded with a $25 million Lilly Endowment. Today it is a $1.15 billion research and learning complex that combines Purdue’s expertise in science, engineering, technology, and biology, with connections to the corporate world. As its website suggests: “Leveraging Lilly Endowment’s investment, Discovery Park has created an innovative environment where major global challenges are examined objectively, generating new ideas and directions for future generations.” One of Discovery Park’s core strengths is “Global Security.” Key research on this subject is designed to respond to security threats, global instability, defense needs, terrorism, nuclear deterrence and proliferation, basically responding to “the most pressing security and defense challenges facing the nation and the world.” Recently, the National Defense Industrial Association, a key military/industrial lobbying group (NDIA) and Purdue University hosted a conference on “hypersonics,” the development of highspeed weapons systems stimulated by a $2.4 billion allocation in the 2020 defense budget.

 

According to a Purdue press release, the university has one of the most comprehensive hypersonic research capabilities. University President Mitch Daniels (2018) declared that the university was “… ready to establish itself as the ‘university hub’ of hypersonic research and development.” Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb declared that “Hypersonics systems are our state’s number one defense priority, and I’m glad we can bring industry leaders together at Purdue University to showcase what Indiana can offer” (Purdue University 2019). Some comments suggested also that this new military research agenda would lead to greater economic development in the Greater Lafayette area. One particularly bizarre spokesperson justified the Purdue commitment to high-speed warfare by referring to the mission of the Morrill Act of 1862 establishing land-grant universities (Bangert 2019).

 

To justify the expansion of collaboration with military contractors and the Department of Defense, a Discovery Park spokesman wrote, “It has become apparent that the United States is no longer guaranteed top dog status on the dance card that is the future of warfare. To maintain military superiority, the focus must shift from traditional weapons of war to advanced systems that rely on AI-based (artificial intelligence) weaponry … we must call upon the government to weave together academia, government and industry for the greater good” (Rubia 2018).

 

As to efforts to build enrollments and earn increasingly scarce resources, Purdue University launched an online university with almost no input from faculty in April 2017. Purdue purchased the discredited Kaplan University, and created the new Purdue Global University. There has been no discussion of the educational value of online education; considerations of “blended” programs, a mix of online and on campus class work; subject matter and programs; who will be teaching the courses offered; and how Purdue Global will survive the growing online market. If the for-profit experience of former Kaplan University is indicative, students will not receive a quality education, will incur debts, and will not secure lucrative employment after they receive degrees.

 

As to changing curriculum President Mitch Daniels (2018) pridefully declared at a meeting of The American Council of Trustees and Alumni, a conservative association, that Purdue is the third most STEM-centric university in the country. 

He further declared that liberal arts programs need to change to adapt to STEM needs. He argued that liberal arts education consists of “conformity of thought, intolerance of dissent and sometimes an authoritarian tendency to quash it, a rejection of the finest Western and Enlightenment traditions in favor of unscholarly revisionism and pseudo-disciplines.”

The tenure system, he proclaimed protected “mediocrity,” “illiberal viewpoints,” “conformity of thought,” “shoddy scholarship,” and was “hopelessly abstruse.” The worst problem he said was the traditional liberal arts curriculum was boring: “histories are written without heroes, excitement … glory, the human elements.” 

Before heading the University as Governor, he encouraged “top educational officials” to suppress the use of Howard Zinn’s book, A People’s History of the United States, from public schools and university teacher training institutes. In an e-mail discovered by an enterprising AP reporter, Daniels wrote upon Zinn’s death that “this terrible anti-American academic has finally passed away.”

The Future of the Neoliberal Agenda and Higher Education

With this backdrop, higher education, with Purdue as just one example, is shifting from influence of educators to politicians and businesspersons, decreasing transparency, growing integration with the military/industrial complex, and shifting educational focus from broad-based curriculum to STEM fields. 

The new criteria for every program decision as to curricula is employment, not providing knowledge of history, culture, and developing the skills to write, think, and act as informed persons in an increasingly complex world. To evaluate performance, universities create measures, numerical “tests” of performance and outcomes, employing private corporations to measure performance, and increasingly measuring virtually every administrative unit at the university by their capacity to be profitable. 

In the end these changes require wresting any influence over educational policy away from faculty and students. In the context of a global educational system fraught with competition over students and scarce resources, market fundamentalism, including commercial competition for students, the promotion of austerity in terms of wages and benefits for educational workers, and the privatization of many institutions and processes within universities, the neoliberal stage of capitalism has brought the contradictions of global capitalism to higher education.

References

Bangert, Dave. 2019. “Purdue ‘Doubling Down’ on Military Research on Hypersonic Flight, Weapons.” Lafayette Journal and Courier. July 30. (https://www.jconline .com/story/news/2019/07/30/purdue-doubling-downmilitary-research-hypersonic -flight-weapons/1864805001/).

 

Barrow, Clyde. 1990. Universities and the Capitalist State. WI: University of Wisconsin Press. Daniels Jr., Mitchell E. 2018. “Reliberalizing the Liberal Arts.” October 12. (https://www .goacta.org/publications/re-liberalizing-the-liberal-arts).

Harvey, David. 2007. A Brief History of Neoliberalism. UK: Oxford University Press.

 

Hershan, Robert and Crystal L. Lauderdale. 2018. Trends in Higher Education: 2018 Outlook: The Rising Need for Sustainable Financial, Operational and Academic Models.            

 

Kauppi, Niilo. 2019. “Waiting for Godot? On Some of the Obstacles for Developing Counter-Forces in higher Education.” Globalizations 16(5):745750.

 

Loss, Christopher. 2012. “Why the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act Still Matters.” July 16. The Chronicle of Higher Education. (https://www.chronicle.com/article/ Why-the-Morrill-Act-Still/132877).

 

Purdue University. 2019. “NDIA, Purdue Launching Inaugural Hypersonics Capabilities Conference to Advance Transformational Military Capabilities.” Purdue Research Foundation          News.    July29. https://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/releases/2019/Q3/ Ndia,-purdue-launching inaugural-hypersonics-capabilities-conference-to-advance -transformationalmilitary-capabilities.html).

 

Rubia, Tomás Díaz de la. 2018. “The New Future of Warfare.” Discovery Park Vice President’s Blog. October 1.

(https://www.purdue.edu/discoverypark/blog/2018/10/ the-new-future-of warfare/).

 

Celebrating Purdue University's work on semi-conductors:

https://youtu.be/qo3g_UqJDIk?si=RjDorAOsERZXpE73


For more information see:

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/4153726770392245772/136806380839985774

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CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

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