Q What should you expect to learn when you pay the big bucks for college?
A: Nothing, you are paying for your future connections.
Business Model
College / University as a business can’t continue because of the aging population and cost. They are going to transform into a subscription model where college is NEVER DONE!!!
Nassim Nicolas Taleb ~ Pedophrasty, Bigoteering, and Other Modern Scams
Clearing the discourse of abuses and abusers. The more you institutionalize rules of ethical behavior that should be voluntary (say, anti-racism, anti-sexism), the more they will be used as a cover for unethical actions.
Rent-seeking academics committing anachronistic fallacy don’t seem to realize that, like science and everything else, moral values experience PROGRESS. By definition the past will be less developed than the present. This, everyone outside of “classics” knows.
Bigoteering Originates with Tim Ferriss, describes tagging someone (or someone’s opinions) as “racist”, “chauvinist” or somethinglikeit-ist in situations where these are not warranted. This is a shoddy manipulation to exploit the stigmas accompanying such labels and force the opponent to spent time and energy explaining “why he/she is not a bigot”. Note that it is the true victims of racism that are insulted by virtue-peddling bigoteers.
THE Land-grant university
The Morrill Acts funded educational institutions by granting federally controlled land to the states for them to sell, to raise funds, to establish and endow “land-grant” colleges.
The mission of these institutions as set forth in the 1862 Act is to focus on the teaching of practical agriculture, science, military science and engineering (though “without excluding… classical studies”), as a response to the industrial revolution and changing social class.[1][2]
This mission was in contrast to the historic practice of higher education to focus on an abstract liberal arts curriculum.
A 1994 expansion gave land grant status to several tribal colleges and universities.
Ultimately, most land-grant colleges became large public universities that today offer a full spectrum of educational opportunities.
However, some land-grant colleges are private schools, including Cornell University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Tuskegee University.
History
Upon passage of the federal land-grant law in 1862, Iowa was the first state legislature to accept the provisions of the Morrill Act, on September 11, 1862.[4][5] Iowa subsequently designated the State Agricultural College (now Iowa State University) as the land grant college on March 29, 1864.[5][6] The first land-grant institution actually created under the Act was Kansas State University, which was established on February 16, 1863, and opened on September 2, 1863.[7] The oldest school that currently holds land-grant status is Rutgers University, founded in 1766 and designated the land-grant college of New Jersey in 1864. The oldest school to ever hold land-grant status was Yale University (founded in 1701), which was named Connecticut’s land-grant recipient in 1863. This designation was later stripped by the Connecticut legislature in 1893 under populist pressure and transferred to what would become the University of Connecticut.[8]
A second Morrill Act was passed in 1890, aimed at the former Confederate states.
This act required each state to show that race was not an admissions criterion, or else to designate a separate land-grant institution for persons of color.[9] Among the seventy colleges and universities which eventually evolved from the Morrill Acts are several of today’s historically black colleges and universities. Though the 1890 Act granted cash instead of land, it granted colleges under that act the same legal standing as the 1862 Act colleges; hence the term “land-grant college” properly applies to both groups.
Later on, other colleges such as the University of the District of Columbia and the “1994 land-grant colleges” for Native Americans were also awarded cash by Congress in lieu of land to achieve “land-grant” status.
In imitation of the land-grant colleges‘ focus on agricultural and mechanical research, Congress later established programs of sea grant colleges (aquatic research, in 1966), space grant colleges (space research, in 1988), and sun grant colleges (sustainable energy research, in 2003).
West Virginia State University, a historically black university, is the only current land-grant university to have lost land-grant status when desegregation cost it its state funding in 1957, and then later to regain this status, which happened in 2001. It is also the smallest land-grant university in the country.[citation needed]
The land-grant college system has been seen as a major contributor in the faster growth rate of the US economy that led to its overtaking the United Kingdom as economic superpower, according to economists from the State University of New York.[10]
State law precedents
Prior to enactment of the Morrill Act in 1862, Michigan State University was chartered under Michigan state law as a state agricultural land-grant institution on February 12, 1855, as the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan, receiving an appropriation of 14,000 acres (57 km2) of state-owned land.
The Farmers’ High School of Pennsylvania, later to become The Pennsylvania State University, followed as a state agricultural land-grant school on February 22 of that year.
Michigan State and Penn State were subsequently designated as the federal land-grant colleges for their states in 1863.
Older state universities – such as the University of Georgia, which was established with a grant of land in 1784 – were also funded through the use of state land grants.[11] Indeed, land grants to educational institutions are a practice inherited from Europe, and are traceable all the way back to the societies of classical antiquity.[12] These earlier examples, however, offered a different “mission” than the practical education offered by land-grant institutions established under the Morrill Act (or the Michigan legislature).
Hatch Act and Smith–Lever Act
Beyond the original land grants, each land-grant college receives annual Federal appropriations for research and extension work on the condition that those funds are matched by state funds.
Expansion
The University of the District of Columbia received land-grant status in 1967 and a $7.24 million endowment (USD) in lieu of a land grant.
In a 1972 Special Education Amendment, American Samoa, Guam, Micronesia, Northern Marianas, and the Virgin Islands each received $3 million.
In 1994, 29 tribal colleges and universities became land-grant institutions under the Elementary and Secondary Education Reauthorization Act. As of 2008, 32 tribal colleges and universities have land-grant status. Most of these colleges grant two-year degrees. Six are four-year institutions, and two offer a master’s degree.
Nomenclature
- sea grant colleges (a program instituted in 1966),
- space grant colleges (instituted in 1988), or
- sun grant colleges (instituted in 2003)
In some states, the land-grant missions for agricultural research and extension have been relegated to a statewide agency of the university system rather than the original land-grant campus; an example is the Texas A&M University System, whose agricultural missions, including the agricultural college at the system’s main campus, are now under the umbrella of Texas A&M AgriLife.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land-grant_university
