Imagining democratic futures for public universities: Educational leadership against fatalism’s temptations
Abstract
At current rates, almost all U.S. public universities could reach a point of zero state subsidy
within the next fifty years. What is a public university without public funding? In this essay, Kathleen
Knight Abowitz considers the future of public universities, drawing upon the analysis provided in John
Dewey’s Democracy and Education. Knight Abowitz conducts an initial institutional analysis through
two broad prisms: that of the political landscape that authorizes universities as public institutions, and
that of the present political–economic context of public education in general and public universities
in particular. Dewey’s conception of democratic education is then explored; his arguments regarding
aims, experience, thinking, and social intelligence provide important tools for imagining the democratic
futures of public universities today.
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