Should Donors Dictate University Curriculums?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Type 7
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Curriculum
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the influence of donors on university curriculums, particularly in the context of education philanthropy. Participants explore whether donor conditions for funding, such as specific course content and objectives, represent enlightened philanthropy or self-serving interference. The conversation touches on implications for academic freedom, practical education, and the financial realities faced by universities.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants argue that donors have the right to impose conditions on their contributions, while universities can choose to accept or reject such donations.
  • There is a viewpoint that donor-designed courses can be beneficial to students, providing practical skills and resources that may not otherwise be available.
  • Others express concern that this trend undermines academic integrity and innovation, suggesting that it places undue influence on educational content.
  • One participant emphasizes the financial constraints of universities, arguing that without donor support, many programs would not exist, thus framing the issue as a necessity rather than a choice.
  • Another participant questions the extent of donor control over educational content, suggesting that university administrators may prioritize donor interests over academic considerations.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants exhibit a range of opinions, with no clear consensus on whether donor influence is beneficial or detrimental to education. Some see it as a necessary compromise, while others view it as a threat to academic freedom.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge the financial pressures on universities and the potential trade-offs involved in accepting donor funding, but do not resolve the implications of these dynamics on educational quality and integrity.

Type 7
Messages
23
Reaction score
0
I saw an article about a new trend in education philanthropy. Some donors, corporate and individual, are no longer satisfied with a school or building being named after them. They now want the university to agree to teach specific courses with specific content and objectives. Some examples:

- An advertising agency designed the curriculum for the university, sends it's own executives once a week to teach courses, and then hires the best graduates.
- A manufacturer of dental products contributed a large sum to a dental school with the understanding that students would be taught how to use the company's products.
- An owner of a pro sports team designed a sports management program that had to be implemented by the university that accepted his gift.

All of these universities were state schools.

Proponents say that state funding is inadequate and this is the only way to offer the programs students want and need. And it is claimed that these corporate-designed programs are more practical and 'real world' than programs designed by academics. Opponents say that this approach hampers free thought and the innovation it engenders, and encroaches upon the traditional 'sanctity' of the pure academic environment.

Some universities have flatly refused some very generous donations when such stringent conditions were attached.

Is this approach enlightened philanthropy or self-serving meddling?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Type 7 said:
Is this approach enlightened philanthropy or self-serving meddling?

Irrelevant question.

Any donor has the right to attach any strings they want to their money. And the university similarly has a right to refuse any such donation on the basis of its strings.

The only question is, are such courses useful to students? In some cases absolutely. In fact, I don't see much of a counter argument in the cases listed. We get large amounts of free equipment from companies like agilent. Is that harming innovation and free thinking? Only if we're supposed to know how to build our own digital oscilloscopes for every experiment we ever do--we certainly should know how they work, though--which would be absurd.
 
franznietzsche said:
Irrelevant question.

Any donor has the right to attach any strings they want to their money. And the university similarly has a right to refuse any such donation on the basis of its strings.

The only question is, are such courses useful to students? In some cases absolutely. In fact, I don't see much of a counter argument in the cases listed. We get large amounts of free equipment from companies like agilent. Is that harming innovation and free thinking? Only if we're supposed to know how to build our own digital oscilloscopes for every experiment we ever do--we certainly should know how they work, though--which would be absurd.

Your experience is irrelevant. You evidently don't understand how cash-strapped most schools are. They do not receive 'large amounts of free equipment.' They do not have the option of refusing one donation and accepting funds from another source. There is no other source. Without that donor there would be no program, and their students would not be served. That's the reality.

These donors are dangling a carrot in front of a starving horse, but only if the horse walks through fire will it get the carrot. The question is not, what is useful to today's rider; the question is, how long can the horse go on that way and still be useful to other riders?
 
does anyone even doubt that donors have control over what's taught? the people who run universities are the ones who have by far the least to do with education. the administrators don't teach courses (hardly ever anyway), the faculty does, but they're under the thumb of the admin also, and the admin is under the thumb of the donors.
 
This is http://www.colorado.edu/Sociology/gimenez/papers/keptu.html"
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Similar threads

  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
4K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
4K
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
3K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
4K
  • · Replies 77 ·
3
Replies
77
Views
11K
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 17 ·
Replies
17
Views
3K