The Multiversity and its Discontents: The Evolution of a Fatal Flaw
The Multiversity and its Discontents: The Evolution of a Fatal Flaw By John Staddon A well-known podcaster has the custom of going “off the grid” for a month each summer, to gain some perspective. I can beat that: I have been retired from academic teaching and research for nearly 14 years and have rarely visited my campus during that time. But last year, I finally encountered the university first-hand, as it is now. Like a 21 st -century Rip Van Winkle, I found it almost unrecognizable. The Multiversity The seeds were sown long ago. American universities have been changing since World War II, and administrations have been complicit. An early signal came from the University of California’s admired president, Clark Kerr. In an engaging 1963 Harvard Godkin Lecture (published as The Uses of the University ) Kerr painted an optimistic “new age” picture that now looks rather different. Noting the rise of the modern “research university,” with its incoherent mix of division...