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Students Know Less After 4 College Years

By ANNIE KARNI, Staff Reporter of the Sun | September 19, 2007

Students at many of the country's most prestigious colleges and universities are graduating with less knowledge of American history, government, and economics than they had as incoming freshmen, with Harvard University seniors scoring a "D+" average on a 60-question multiple-choice exam about civic literacy.

According to a report released yesterday by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, the average college senior at the 50 colleges and universities polled did not earn a passing grade.

"At the most expensive colleges, they actually graduate knowing less," the executive director of the Jack Miller Center at the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Michael Ratliff, said. "Colleges and universities are not directing students to the courses that would educate them. We want to know whether after getting $300 billion to do their work, universities are actually educating their students."

At universities such as Princeton, Yale, Cornell, Duke, and Berkeley, seniors scored lower on the test, available here, than freshmen, living proof of the broadening relevancy of the old Harvard adage that the university is a storehouse of knowledge because "the freshmen bring so much and the seniors take away so little."

The average foreign student studying in an American college learned nothing about the country's history and its civic institutions, according to the study.

The low scores indicate a looming crisis in American citizenship, officials at the institute said yesterday, as students who increased their knowledge of American history in college were more likely to register to vote and to participate in civic activities as adults.

The study, titled "Failing Our Students, Failing America," was conducted by researchers at the department of public policy at the University of Connecticut. The exam was distributed to 14,000 college seniors at 50 institutions of higher education across the country. The researchers hand-picked 25 "elite" schools, and randomly selected 25 schools from all four-year American colleges and universities to poll. The multiple-choice questions were written by specialists in each field.

A professor of American history at Columbia University, Eric Foner, said that a multiple-choice exam testing factual knowledge of history could exaggerate student ignorance of American history.

"The study of history has changed enormously," Mr. Foner said. "It's become much more broad and diverse. The study of facts about particular battles has diminished, but maybe students are in a better position to answer questions about the abolition of slavery."

Some of the questions in the exam were strictly factual, asking students to identify which battle ended Revolutionary War, or the dates when President Lincoln was in office. Other questions tested their understanding of different forms of government, or of the basic theories of philosophers such as Plato.

"History has a pragmatic value," Mr. Foner said. "You are acquiring skills that are desired by employers — an ability to write, analyze material, and produce your own point of view."

The chairman of the history department at Princeton University, Jeremy Adelman, said that providing students with a foundation in American history and governance should not be the sole mission of any institution of higher education.

"You have to ask what is the social function of the university?" Mr. Adelman said. "If you're in chemical engineering, why study history? Should we require students to study history? I don't think if you polled the history department faculty there would be unanimity on the question." Students at Princeton are required to take one history class, he said. The course does not have to be in American history.

Less than half of the students who participated identified the phrase "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal" as a line from the Declaration of Independence. Many of them identified its source as "The Communist Manifesto," or said that it was an inscription on the Statue of Liberty.

Cornell and Princeton spokeswomen said the institutions would not comment on the report. A Harvard spokesman did not return a call for comment. A spokeswoman for Yale pointed out that history is the most popular major at the college, and that last year, 3,586 students out of about 5,200 students registered to take a history course.

The Intercollegiate Studies Institute was founded in 1953 with William Buckley Jr. as its president. Its mission is to cultivate the values of democracy and of a free society among American college students. This is the third year that the institute has issued the report on civic knowledge among American college students.

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I am not at all surprised at the results. I presume that the curriculum planners at these institutions were former... [MORE]

Lou Voren 

Sep 19, 2007 00:24

I will never forget watching an 9 year old girl on a New York Television station NY 1, hugging a... [MORE]

Dorothy Wachsstock 

Sep 19, 2007 07:40

As an alum of one of these esteemed institions, my guess is that the test discovered more about lack of... [MORE]

Bob Lefton 

Sep 19, 2007 12:19

On the basis of the price tag of a university education versus the benefits it provides, higher education is a... [MORE]

R. Johnson 

Oct 30, 2007 12:00

Harvard and Princeton admissions are selecting a tiny fraction of the allegedly most elite high school students. If these kids... [MORE]

E. 

Sep 19, 2007 08:09

Sad ... but are you really surprised? The deadwood edition of The Sun lists the first 20 questions and says... [MORE]

Bill 

Sep 19, 2007 08:47

Unfortunately, this is not limited to non-core subjects. I have a sophomore at a prestigious technically oriented college and she... [MORE]

Susan 

Sep 19, 2007 11:04

...if even prestigious Harvard scores a D+. Me, I missed 6 out of 60, though the correct answers were at... [MORE]

Scott Baker 

Sep 19, 2007 11:10

Nice title, I am a recent graduate and this article gets me fired up. I didn't go to college to... [MORE]

Ryan Nesbitt 

Sep 19, 2007 16:03

I took the quiz very quickly and received an 86%. What are these kids being taught? How to apply condoms?... [MORE]

Brian Schafer 

Sep 19, 2007 11:54

These examinations simiply didn't ask the "Right" questions! This is NOT the students' fault. Isn't that the common kind of... [MORE]

Chic Mom 

Oct 5, 2007 11:33

As a retired teacher of 30 years (elementary) and the wife of a retired Army NCO, I am saddened at... [MORE]

Judy Rudolph 

Sep 19, 2007 12:12

I went to the University of Florida for free and scored a 52 out of 60. Don't waste tens of... [MORE]

Partho Roy 

Sep 19, 2007 13:43

The replies offered by the faculty were worse than the scores. They demonstrated that "professors" are in the PC opinion... [MORE]

OCULUS 

Sep 19, 2007 14:48

I just took this test and got 57/60 (95%), so I feel good about myself. However, I don't feel as... [MORE]

AMM 

Sep 19, 2007 15:36

It should be noted that some of the questions were beyond the scope of most Intro to US History courses,... [MORE]

Heather 

Sep 22, 2007 21:36

Speaking as a college senior at a school comparable to those attended by the surveyed students, I started the test... [MORE]

Dan Adair 

Sep 19, 2007 16:50

As a scientist, I'm not convinced that this was a valid predictor of intelligence. To indirectly suggest that these students... [MORE]

Terry Hansen 

Sep 19, 2007 17:09

Might it have something to do with the constantly reinforced message that everything outside your major is irrelevant? The academic... [MORE]

Peter V 

Sep 19, 2007 17:18

I graduated with honors from a top-25 school with a double major in history and political science (both departments are... [MORE]

JB 

Sep 19, 2007 19:41

Yes, I scored 100%. My degree is in history but it's from 1984, and at that, from the Regents' External... [MORE]

Kevin R.C. 'Hognose' O'Brien 

Sep 20, 2007 14:55

Politicians worth their salt don't want an educated electorate or - God forbid! - a cultured one. If they had... [MORE]

Max Vladimir 

Sep 20, 2007 08:05

Too many of us dottering college graduates later mindlessly give money to our alma maters. But the social studies departments... [MORE]

Richard Rider 

Sep 20, 2007 10:17

I would suggest that the title of the article is misleading. Students surely know more, but about different things, and... [MORE]

tim 

Sep 20, 2007 13:50

My "curriculum vitae": Grandson of Serbian immigrant iron miner, plumber's son, Marine jet pilot, degrees in engineering and veterinary medicine from... [MORE]

R.M.Zobenica 

Sep 20, 2007 16:52

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