The Atlantic | Higher Education’s Identity Crisis by Adam Harris

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American higher education is at a crossroads, as colleges grapple with a succession of crises—from the post‑Great‑Recession boom and the pandemic to federal budget cuts, a looming demographic decline, and the disruptive rise of AI in the classroom. Graduates this spring face a precarious job market where entry‑level positions, once seen as a guaranteed next step, are increasingly uncertain, prompting students to question whether a college degree is still a worthwhile investment given soaring tuition that can exceed $75,000 a year. The traditional model of universities trying to serve both as a broad liberal‑arts experience and a direct pipeline to profitable careers is unraveling, with institutions ranging from elite research universities to small liberal‑arts colleges confronting financial strain, enrollment drops, and pressure to justify their costs. Simultaneously, politicians are inserting themselves into curriculum debates, and a growing interest in trade‑school pathways reflects doubts about the long‑term viability of the knowledge‑economy. As a result, scholars and journalists argue that the purpose of higher education must be re‑examined, emphasizing a more versatile, interdisciplinary education that prepares students for a rapidly changing future rather than a single, guaranteed career track.

Read more: https://www.theatlantic.com/podcasts/2026/05/higher-education-college-crisis/687233/?utm_source=feed

#GreatRecession #AI #MorrillAct

Colleges Are at a Breaking Point

The AI job market has made tuition look like a dubious investment. But it only exposes the deeper identity crisis in American higher education.

The Atlantic

Civil War Historians Agree 14th
Amendment Disqualifies Trump From
Ballot

-- The Daily Beast

Vermont's United States Senator in those days, Justin Morrill, cleared up that point very nicely. It is my hope quotes from him make it to the Supreme Court.

Incidentally, the Morrill Act was named for Justin Morrill. I graduated from the very first Morrill Act land grant college, the University of Maine (same graduating class, the Class of 1970, as the author, Stephen King - yeah, I am old beyond belief).

Glad Stephen King dumps on Donald Trump every chance he gets.

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#democrats #disqualificationclause #donaldtrump #14thamendment #fourteenthamendment #morrillact #stephenking #trump

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ORIGINAL 1860S DEBATE OVER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT AND ITS DISQUALIFICATION CLAUSE

ABC News

What the framers said about the 14th Amendment's disqualification clause: Analysis

It is being used to challenge Trump in some states from being on the ballot.

BySteven Portnoy
December 29, 2023, 5:54 PM

Justin Morrill, who is referenced in this piece, was very important in Vermont history. I graduated from the first Morrill Act land-grant state college, the University of Maine (Class of 1970).

:

#democrats #disqualification #disqualificationclause #donaldtrump #14thamendment #fourteenthamendment #insurrection #insurrectionist #justinmorrill #morrillact #trump #trumpinsurrectionist #trumptraitor #universityofmaine

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