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Graham Stull
Graham Stull
3 months ago

Was having a conversation with my daughter recently, who has navigated the woke icebergs of a once-prestigious university and is finishing her final year of a Law degree.
We agree that for most disciplines, the time and resources put into university would be better spent in the labour market. To wit, her friend who did Film Studies – had he taken the money used on that degree, gone to LA and worked as a cable runner for a studio, he would be further in his career, with more knowledge of film, than he is now.

Arkadian Arkadian
Arkadian Arkadian
3 months ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

In fairness, that would have probably been true regardless.

Alan Elgey
Alan Elgey
3 months ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

Your daughter did well to study Law, rather than (say) ‘Law Studies’.
There is a theory developing* that any course like ‘Film Studies’, or anything with ‘….Studies’ in its title is not worth the time or expense.
(*At least this is so in UK. It has actually been around for a long time, but seems to have been getting more prominence recently, along with the idea that Tony Blair’s notion that 50% of kids should go to university was maybe not entirely sound or thought-through.)

Graham Stull
Graham Stull
3 months ago
Reply to  Alan Elgey

Very good point: Gender Studies, Film Studies, Social Studies….

ChilblainEdwardOlmos
ChilblainEdwardOlmos
3 months ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

And coming soon to a university near you:
Studies Studies!

Chipoko
Chipoko
3 months ago
Reply to  Alan Elgey

Blair’s policy to shove 50% of school leavers through the higher education system has been a disaster.
Many (if not most) UK universities offer low quality degrees in the humanities (e.g. Media Studies, Gender Studies, etc.) which has devalued the quality and desirability of university education and the degrees awarded to students. Entrance standards are very low in many instances and there is huge pressure on academics not to fail students, no matter how sub-standard their work may be (certainly the case at one of the ‘better’ universities where I lectured full-time for nearly a decade). In my experience I would say that two-thirds of the students in each of my cohorts were unable to write English properly, advance cogent arguments or cite sources to substantiate their assertions. An even higher percentage demonstrated a lack of interest in and commitment to their studies.
The consequence of such a misguided policy has been to produce masses of graduates unqualified for real-world jobs; who consider themselves entitled and ‘above’ more technical/junior jobs; and are substantially unemployed (and frankly unemployable). As external examiner to several business schools I was horrified by the rote woke content of student work, in which only orthodox woke perspectives were permitted by their teachers, ruthlessly committed to converting their young, impressionable charges. Having been processed through the gigantic woke brainwashing machine of higher education, it is hardly surprising that this generation of disconnected graduates is the vanguard of the mindless Woke army, driven by an Establishment elite that grasped every lever of power, authority and influence within the spectrum of UK public and private endeavour.

Andrew Buckley
Andrew Buckley
3 months ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

Similar in the UK. My son did an apprenticeship and ended up with his name on the credits of a couple of documentaries. He needed an assistant on one job and someone with a degree and masters in “Film Studies” came in for no pay, just experience. This chap couldn’t cope with being the “assistant” to a 20yo who knew what he was doing and didn’t bother turning up for the third days work.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
3 months ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

David Mamet, right here on UnHerd, said no one learns anything in film school. My son’s buddy went to film school in LA, took out huge loans to attend, got nowhere, and moved back East to live with his parents.
As for your daughter’s friend, Hollywood isn’t even hiring key grips if they’re white and male.

Charles Stanhope
Charles Stanhope
3 months ago

Surprise, surprise!

Michael James
Michael James
3 months ago

Universities limiting free speech are like medical doctors breaking the Hippocratic Oath, or companies selling adulterated products. They should suffer similar consequences.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 months ago

Of course, they do. If anything, the recent hearings with the three college presidents confirmed that much. But don’t limit this to the college campus. Students eventually graduate and their ideas start to infect the labor force. The US business scene is full of idiotic moments that are rooted in campus culture.

Matt B
Matt B
3 months ago

The Captive Mind by Czeslaw Milosz springs to mind (whilst hoping it has not been sent to the pyre of verboten books). Will “The West” now adopt precisely the models of suppression that the Cold War sought to end? The foci and methods may be different – but the direction is eerily similar.

Robert Pruger
Robert Pruger
3 months ago

I have enormous regard for FIRE, enough to modestly donate to it each year. I trust the fairness of its categories. But the above numbers are puzzling.
100 colleges and universities signed the Chicago Statement. Yet 63 managed a green. At a minimum, 37 were that were either virtue signalling or didn’t understand its pledge.
Also puzzling are state universities, funded by the state residents and by constitutional law, required to uphold the constitutional rights of its students, faculty, and administrators on campus (there are judicial noted limitations to free speech in the classroom). All such state institutions, should be earning green by FIRE. They are not. And state institutions are the vast majority of higher ed institutions. We need trustees with backbone, who insist top level administrators are committed to free speech, particularly for those whose views don’t conform to the prevailing views. Sadly there is a lot of work to do.