Is There Any Chance of Innovation in Higher Education?

POLITICS & POLICY

Much of American higher education is wasteful or worse, imparting mistaken ideas about the world in the minds of students to make them amenable to the “progressive” project of ever-expanding state control. It costs a tremendous amount but often delivers little more than a paper credential.

You might think that such an industry would be easy for innovators to enter so as to successfully lure customers into their superior offerings. In today’s Martin Center article, David Dufendach looks at the problems that confront those who contemplate higher-education innovation.

He examines two big problems — the barriers to entry and the possibility of retaliation by entrenched schools — and concludes that they are not fatal to innovation, writing, “Although the deck is currently stacked in favor of the existing DEI culture, there are many opportunities that await the educational entrepreneur.”

Articles You May Like

Biden Pardons 11 and Grants Clemency to Five Crack Dealers
3 Republican Arizona state House lawmakers vote with Democrats in favor of repealing abortion law
US Gives TikTok an Ultimatum: Sell or Wave American Market Goodbye
13-year-old punk accused of stealing woman’s purse, punching her, throwing her to ground; but he’s soon kissing concrete, too
Georgia’s Gabe Sterling Goes Silent and Is “In Hiding” Since Georgia State Election Board Finds Violations in Second 2020 Election Investigation

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *