Trifling With
Education
By Dr. Frank Crane
The United States was founded by people who were thoroughly
convinced of the absolute importance of an educated citizenship as a basis for
a permanent democracy.
If you are going to have a government by the people as well
as for the people and the people you must take measures to develop the kind of
people who are capable of governing.
If the people of America are to take over the business of
kings into their own hands they must all be kings. They must not only know how
to govern themselves, but they must learn the technique of government and also
acquire the taste for government.
Along with citizenship and culture must go the will for
politics, the willingness to assume the responsibilities of politics, the
willingness to assume the responsibilities of politics and the training
necessary thereto.
After 150 years of struggle against the inertia of tradition
we are recognizing the citizenship of the woman. And it is of vital importance
that the educated woman should be prepared to assume that citizenship.
Although we have always boasted of our educational
facilities, we have nevertheless only been trifling with education. There is no
doubt that the teachers of our country are underpaid, and that if we continue
our present policy this teaching force is going to deteriorate more rapidly.
You cannot defy natural forces and it is natural for the
more capable people to seek those avenues of employment that bring the most
remuneration and give the most opportunity for liberal culture.
Dr. William Allen Neilsen, president of Smith’s College,
says: “We are facing the annihilation of a profession.”
Teaching does not pay. Other professions do. The college
graduate is entering the industrial and commercial fields. They become
department managers or go into business for themselves; they take up chemistry
or dietetics; they write or edit.
A New York professor writes: Most of the young men now
coming into the teaching ranks are mediocre. Otherwise they would not be here.
There is too much demand for them elsewhere. The world is being rebuilt and
they are wanted. The universities cannot get them.
In view of all this it is difficult to conceive of a more
pressing obligation upon our people than that of worthily endowing and supporting
their institutions of learning.
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