2

Some colleges fail in general education

College class

To view this content, Javascript must be enabled and Adobe Flash Player must be installed.

Get Adobe Flash player

TEXT OF STORY

Steve Chiotakis: It's a big week for colleges and universities all across the country. U.S. News and World Report publishes its annual rankings tomorrow. Meanwhile, a different sort of scorecard is out today. And the results might surprise you. Harvard got a D. Yale and Brown flunked.

From the Marketplace Education Desk at WYPR in Baltimore, Amy Scott explains.


AMY SCOTT: The American Council of Trustees and Alumni graded more than 700 colleges and universities according to the courses they require outside a student's major. More than half of private colleges got a D or F for requiring two subjects or fewer.

Anne Neal is the group's president.

ANNE NEAL: Colleges and universities have essentially allowed their general education to become anything goes. And we think that that is doing students a disservice, that they deserve more than a do-it-yourself kit for $30-, $40-, $50,000 a year.

Neal says employers complain that college graduates can't write well or do basic math.

Debra Humphreys is with the Association of American Colleges and Universities. She says making all students take American Lit 101 won't solve anything.

DEBRA HUMPHREYS: We are hearing from employers that they want more from college graduates. But I would not say that we're hearing that they want a more traditional, old-fashioned kind of core curriculum.

She says bosses want workers who can communicate and solve problems. Skills, she says, they can learn in many kinds of courses.

I'm Amy Scott for Marketplace.

About the author

Amy Scott is Marketplace’s education correspondent covering the K-12 and higher education beats, as well as general business and economic stories.
Richard Follet's picture
Richard Follet - Aug 16, 2010

Yeah, like Biff Tannen said to himself when he was a lot younger.
"You sound stupid when you get it wrong!"

Duanra Nodiug's picture
Duanra Nodiug - Aug 16, 2010

These results are hard to believe. For example, I checked Johns Hopkins on the ACTA listings and according to them you won't learn anything there! Disclaimer, I'm not affiliated to JH. Anne Neal certainly must have learned how to shuffle data during her time at Harvard.
It doesn't hurt to see a study that tries to debunk the crazy US news and world reports but this one seems to be largely skewed unfortunately.