Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is higher education ripe for creative destruction?
Is higher education ripe for creative destruction?
Dec 14, 2025 3:45 PM

The recent revelations of a nationwide college admissions and testing bribery scheme have met with a variety of reactions. There have been conversations about fairness and privilege in admissions practices. There have been expressions of lack of surprise, cynicism, or “that’s just how the world works.” And there are already the beginnings of a class-action lawsuit by students who claim their college degrees have been devalued by the rigged admissions system.

There are a lot of reasons to be pessimistic about higher education in America today. But are all these problems and turmoil merely the birth pangs of a new age? A few years ago in a short essay, “The Future of Higher Education” in his book The System Has a Soul, Hunter Baker argued that higher education was ripe for massive change and “directly in the path of creative destruction.” Baker saw the revolution in technology and content distribution as a main driver of change in the education market. But he was not talking about the ephemeral online colleges whose ads clutter your Google search results. These institutions, he said, are the kinds of pure intermediaries that will be most susceptible to market changes. Rather, Baker looked further ahead to the “disintermediation” of the whole education market. Perhaps in the future professors will be able to provide their services directly to students, who will in turn be able to put together a “patchwork transcript” of courses they have taken from top professors around the world. Baker predicts that a new age of educational choice will chip away at the current system.

The recent bribery scandal would seem to bolster the notion that the system is ripe for creative destruction and for the appearance of education entrepreneurs who can innovate and provide better educational goods at lower costs and lower prices. Yet it’s hard to imagine that elite universities would ever fail or be supplanted by something new. Baker himself argued that traditional institutions would survive, even if in smaller numbers. After all, they have built up centuries worth of economic and social capital—and government funding. They also have the costly specialized equipment and labs necessary for certain kinds of research. Furthermore, it’s hard to imagine a world in which prospective students (and their parents) would not desire the prestige of a degree granted by an elite school.

But strange things happen. For instance, Sears was an pany—until it wasn’t. There was a time when it was unthinkable that the great American retailer would go bankrupt. Is it so unreasonable to think that something like this couldn’t happen to the supposedly immovable institutions of higher education? The fact that colleges and universities in America are so dependent on government plicates the picture, to be sure. There’s also an intricate system of accreditation that can function as a barrier to entry for new initiatives. Yet with enough plaints about rigged admissions practices, lifelong student debt, and diminishing returns on private and public educational funding, the scales may tip toward a new educational reality—one cooked up not in an elite university’s science lab, but in the mind of an education entrepreneur.

Image source: Wikimedia

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The ‘Moral’ Minimum Wage Increase Hurts Teens and Minorities
Religious activists are stumping for a minimum wage increase as a way to help the disadvantaged. But do they understand the economics? Anthony Bradley observes that government-mandated pay hikes “actually hurt teens and low-skilled minorities in the long run because minimum wage jobs are usually entry-level positions filled by employees with limited work experience and few job skills.” Read the mentary here. ...
Theocracy Paranoia
mented previously on Randall Balmer’s new book. The online article this month from First Things is Ross Douthat’s excellent review of a raft of books (including Balmer’s) that take up similar themes. In a nutshell, there is currently a lot of hyperventilating about the danger of an unholy alliance between church and state in the United States, which, to most religious folks probably seems to read the trends 180 degress wrong. Douthat doesn’t even include Damon Linker’s book (an expansion...
Thar She Blows
Might these be the new “Cuisinarts of the sea”? This story, “Energy from the Restless Sea,” in today’s NYT examines the efforts of experimental inventors to find machines that excel in “harnessing the perpetual motion of the ocean and turning it into modity in high demand: energy.” There are a variety of designs and types of machines, so of course not all of them are a danger to chop up hapless fish. Watermill of Braine-le-Château, Belgium (12th century). Photograph taken...
Will Chicago Mandate the “Everyday Low Price” too?
Chicago’s City Council passed a measure last week that mandates “big box” stores such as Wal-Mart, Best Buy and Lowe’s to pay workers — regardless of experience — a minimum wage of $13 an hour including benefits by 2010. See the opinion piece in today’s Wall Street Journal. The justification is to help poor people have a better standard of living. Is this another example of good intentions mixed with bad economics? This time I doubt the intentions are to...
Religious Freedom in China
Do economic, political, and religious freedom go together? Rodney Stark, writing in his recent book The Victory of Reason, says that “It seems doubtful than an effective modern economy can be created without adopting capitalism, as was demonstrated by the failure of mand economies of the Soviet Union and China.” He also writes, There are many reasons people embrace Christianity, including its capacity to sustain a deeply emotional and existentially satisfying faith. But another significant factor is its appeal to...
‘We get Viagra. They get malaria.’
At least, the title of this post is typical of the mantra against the practices of drug panies, according to Peter W. Huber’s “Of Pills and Profits: In Defense of Big Pharma,” in Commentary magazine (HT: Arts & Letters Daily). Huber, a senior fellow of the Manhattan Institute, summarizes in brief the pany argument, and then goes on to examine what truth there is in such claims. He says of the difference between creating and administering drugs, “Getting drug policy...
On Blogging
G. K. Chesterton on Journalists: “…there exists in the modern world, perhaps for the first time in history, a class of people whose interest is not in that things should happen well or happen badly, should happen successfully or happen unsuccessfully, should happen to the advantage of this party or the advantage of that party, but whose interest simply is that things should happen. “It is the one great weakness of journalism as a picture of our modern existence, that...
Are You Ready or Really Ready?
vs. Almost everyone has been critical of the government’s methods when es to disaster preparedness and response. We here at Acton also tend to be very focused on the importance of private enterprise when es to dealing with local problems. And so I present an interesting case study for your analysis: The Department of Homeland Security has created a website, www.ready.gov, that promises to be a resource for those facing an imminent natural disaster. The Federation of American Scientists has...
Coulter on Christianity and the Welfare State
In this Beliefnet interview conducted by Charlotte Allen, conservative firebrand Ann Coulter references the work of Acton senior fellow Marvin Olasky: Is it possible to be a good Christian and sincerely believe, as Jim Wallis does, that a bigger welfare state and higher taxes to fund it is the best way in plex modern society for us to fulfill our Gospel obligation to help the poor? It’s possible, but not likely. Confiscatory taxation enforced by threat of imprisonment is “stealing,”...
The New Suburbanism
How many of you would like to live here? Tom Monaghan has received a lot of attention for his plans to create munity in Florida in conjunction with the founding of a new Roman Catholic university: “The panying town will provide single- and multi-family housing in a wide range of styles and prices, along mercial and office facilities to modate the businesses and organizations needed to support this major academic institution.” Here’s what Katie Couric had to say in an...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved