Education as a Social Institution: A look at how colleges and universities shape and reflect society
This volume examines how higher learning evolved from training ministers and professionals to offering a broad array of studies. It explains rising student demands, changing curricula, and the tension between traditional liberal arts and newer, more vocational goals. The book explores how colleges respond to pressure from students, parents, faculty, and public expectations, and what that means for the future of higher education in America.
Readers will gain a clear view of how institutional choices affect knowledge, culture, social status, and social mobility, as well as the role of education in shaping attitudes, values, and national development. The discussion is grounded in concrete examples and reflects on the ongoing debate over what universities should teach and why.
- How colleges balance tradition with changing student needs
- Impact of curriculum shifts on knowledge and prestige
- Roles of teachers, administrators, and students in education’s evolution
- Connections between education, social class, and democratic ideals
Ideal for readers interested in sociology, education, and the social forces that shape learning in modern America.