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The Dream Is Over: The Crisis of Clark Kerr’s California Idea of Higher Education (The Clark Kerr Lectures On the Role of Higher Education in Society #4)

The Dream Is Over: The Crisis of Clark Kerr’s California Idea of Higher Education (The Clark Kerr Lectures On the Role of Higher Education in Society #4)

Current price: $41.94
Publication Date: September 8th, 2016
Publisher:
University of California Press
ISBN:
9780520292840
Pages:
260
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Description

A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program for monographs. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.
 
The Dream Is Over tells the extraordinary story of the 1960 Master Plan for Higher Education in California, created by visionary University of California President Clark Kerr and his contemporaries. The Master Plan’s equality of opportunity policy brought college within reach of millions of American families for the first time and fashioned the world’s leading system of public research universities. The California idea became the leading model for higher education across the world and has had great influence in the rapid growth of universities in China and East Asia. Yet, remarkably, the political conditions supporting the California idea in California itself have evaporated. Universal access is faltering, public tuition is rising, the great research universities face new challenges, and educational participation in California, once the national leader, lags far behind. Can the social values embodied in Kerr’s vision be renewed?
 

About the Author

Simon Marginson is Professor of International Higher Education at the Institute of Education, University College London, and Director of the ESRC/HEFCE Centre for Global Higher Education. He is also joint editor of the journal Higher Education.

Praise for The Dream Is Over: The Crisis of Clark Kerr’s California Idea of Higher Education (The Clark Kerr Lectures On the Role of Higher Education in Society #4)

"This is a remarkable contribution to the debate about the modern university and its place insociety."
— Higher Education