{"title":"Deep Knowledge: A Strategy for University Budgetary Cuts.","authors":"D. Reynolds","doi":"10.19030/CIER.V9I4.9787","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"During and after the Financial Crisis of 2008, many institutions of higher learning have had revenue and budgetary reductions, forcing them to make severe university budget cuts and university reductions in force. Often the university cuts are preceded by a process of evaluation of academic programs where institutions determine what they stand for and value. One option, when forced to downsize, is to use a business model, such as Sullivan (2004) explains, where high-value, low-cost programs are kept and low-value, high-cost programs are cut. However, a business model of education does not reflect the true social value of education or the importance of arts, sciences and humanities, where students learn how to struggle with, write about and understand the world. John Henry Cardinal Newman’s (1852) treatise, The Idea of a University, suggests an alternative strategy of cost cutting that has to do with deep knowledge, i.e. keep the oldest programs in existence on a given university. Using the deep knowledge concept, a university will cut young (junior programs) first and retain old (senior) programs until the very last, rather than deciding cuts based on a business model. The deep knowledge concept emphasizes a Socratic ideal where professors and students wrestle over concepts, such as the meaning of “beauty.”","PeriodicalId":91062,"journal":{"name":"Contemporary issues in education research (Littleton, Colo.)","volume":"9 1","pages":"145-158"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-10-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Contemporary issues in education research (Littleton, Colo.)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.19030/CIER.V9I4.9787","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
During and after the Financial Crisis of 2008, many institutions of higher learning have had revenue and budgetary reductions, forcing them to make severe university budget cuts and university reductions in force. Often the university cuts are preceded by a process of evaluation of academic programs where institutions determine what they stand for and value. One option, when forced to downsize, is to use a business model, such as Sullivan (2004) explains, where high-value, low-cost programs are kept and low-value, high-cost programs are cut. However, a business model of education does not reflect the true social value of education or the importance of arts, sciences and humanities, where students learn how to struggle with, write about and understand the world. John Henry Cardinal Newman’s (1852) treatise, The Idea of a University, suggests an alternative strategy of cost cutting that has to do with deep knowledge, i.e. keep the oldest programs in existence on a given university. Using the deep knowledge concept, a university will cut young (junior programs) first and retain old (senior) programs until the very last, rather than deciding cuts based on a business model. The deep knowledge concept emphasizes a Socratic ideal where professors and students wrestle over concepts, such as the meaning of “beauty.”
在2008年金融危机期间和之后,许多高等教育机构的收入和预算都有所减少,迫使他们大幅削减大学预算和大学数量。在大学裁员之前,通常会对学术项目进行评估,由院校决定自己的立场和价值。当被迫缩减规模时,一种选择是使用商业模式,如Sullivan(2004)所解释的那样,保留高价值、低成本的项目,削减低价值、高成本的项目。然而,教育的商业模式并没有反映出教育的真正社会价值,也没有反映出艺术、科学和人文学科的重要性,在这些学科中,学生们学会了如何与世界抗争、如何写世界、如何理解世界。约翰·亨利·红衣主教纽曼(John Henry Cardinal Newman, 1852)的论文《大学的理念》(The Idea of a University)提出了另一种削减成本的策略,这种策略与深厚的知识有关,即在某所大学保留最古老的课程。利用深度知识概念,大学将首先削减年轻的(初级课程),保留老的(高级课程)直到最后,而不是根据商业模式决定削减。深度知识概念强调苏格拉底式的理想,教授和学生在概念上进行角力,比如“美”的含义。