Gongol.com Archives: July 2025
July 20, 2025
US attitudes towards higher education are improving
After taking a beating for quite a while in both the political arena and the zeitgeist, American higher education is rising in its public esteem. It's still below previous highs, according to a Gallup survey, but the improvement in public confidence is both significant in size and broad-based. Gallup's review says "About three-quarters of U.S. adults agree that higher education leads to greater innovation and discovery, while 69% say it results in better jobs and career advancement for individuals", both of which are key selling points for the sector. ■ The leading concerns are fairly predictable -- political bias and high costs. And it's likely that some of the public contention over those issues during the past few years has had something of a corrective effect, which is how these things are supposed to work: Institutions of all stripes should generally be cautiously responsive to public pressure. ■ This is especially important when they are run by priesthoods, whether literally or figuratively. Academia is quite certainly a figurative priesthood, complete with entrenched hierarchies, apostolic-style succession, and even priestly robes. That priesthood should definitely act as a bulwark against radicalism in all its forms, both those introduced from within and imposed from without. But it shouldn't be an absolute monarchy, either. ■ Society invests in higher education, both directly and indirectly, because it has the expectation that colleges will produce better citizens and generate economic returns on the investment. Those institutions should be insulated from, but not insensitive to, the thermodynamics of public opinion: Like wool mittens, not welding gloves. We can be cautiously hopeful that the changing tide of public opinion reflects some harmonization of interests, because the academic world remains fundamentally important to a world of economic and individual liberties.
An overwhelmingly good guide to AI usage
Will Leitch: "If you use AI to write something for you, it is meaningless and we'd all be better off if you had never said anything in the first place." And nine other observations, generally quite right.