In the fall of 2018, 19.9 million US students will attend college. Over
the next decade, the US Department of Education expects that number to
rise by another million students. More than four thousand colleges and
universities serve these students, employing hundreds of thousands of
workers. By these measures, the higher education industry is booming.
Yet at the same time, headlines blaze about universities in crisis.
Corporate-style management, cost-cutting governments, mobilization by
students, and strikes by faculty members have all taken their toll. To
many students and staff alike, these institutions have become a
miserable place to study and work, raising the question: What makes for
a good university?
In this inspiring new work, Raewyn Connell asks us to consider just
that. She argues that in order to reform universities, we need to start
by fundamentally rethinking what universities do. Drawing on the
examples offered by pioneering universities and educational reformers
around the world, Connell outlines a practical vision for how our
universities can become both more engaging and more productive places,
driven by social good rather than profit. She also shows how these
changes can ripple beyond academics, leading to the building of fairer
societies and a richer global economy of knowledge.