The ongoing decline of Hampshire College, a liberal arts institution in Amherst, Massachusetts, is another sad tale of a struggling small private US campus. It may also carry a much larger warning about higher education鈥檚 purported future of broad access and lifelong learning.
Hampshire鈥檚 signature characteristic is its system of letting students choose their major, or 鈥渃oncentration鈥, and then working out the combination of classes to make it happen.
This model, whereby students are told to be 鈥渢he entrepreneur of your own education鈥, would seem to be prime preparation for a future US economy in which young workers are repeatedly told to expect a dozen or more jobs in their lifetimes and a need to constantly retrain for careers not yet even conceived.
鈥淭hey are absolutely fearless,鈥 one former Hampshire president, Ralph Hexter, said of its students. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l say, 鈥業 want to do this鈥, and maybe they know nothing about it, but they teach themselves.鈥
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鈥淲e need to robot-proof our students,鈥 said another former president, Miriam Nelson. 鈥淥ur educational model 鈥 which is enquiry-based, student-driven and very interdisciplinary 鈥 is more relevant today, I would say, than even when we were started in 1970.鈥
And yet, at perhaps the signature location for such an approach, it somehow isn鈥檛 working out.
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There are various reasons why, many not unique to Hampshire, starting with money. The 1,400-student college has always lacked resources, having been given little financial endowment when created as an experiment by four neighbouring institutions. It also faces the same hurdle of declining high-school enrolment that鈥檚 hobbling or closing other small private聽colleges聽in the north-eastern US.
But the high level of responsibility Hampshire places on its students to chart their own career 鈥 a key demand of the new economy 鈥 appears to be exacerbating rather than answering those financial and demographic challenges.
One key reason, said Professor Hexter, now provost at the University of California, Davis, is the growing cost of higher education. Back in the 1970s, he explained, college students often came from families with their own college experience, and the relatively low cost left them far more open to educational risks and the pursuit of personal interests.
Now, with costs exploding and college access expanding 鈥 more than 40 per cent of Davis students are first-generation 鈥 students and parents are more聽inclined聽to stick with safer bets and what they are told are more predictable pay-offs for such a major family investment.
鈥淢y parents knew that it was hopeless for them to tell me what I should study, whereas what I observe is a much greater proportion of students today who have parents who are guiding their students much more,鈥 Professor Hexter said.
That appears true even at high-performing institutions.
Reed College in Oregon shares with Hampshire a decidedly countercultural vibe and a top ranking for alumni who later earn doctorates. But Reed is thriving by offering curriculum choices that are long-time liberal arts standards, emphasising mandatory core components.
As US colleges increasingly enrol students with little family experience in higher education, early limits on undergraduate options may prove a key advantage, said Reed鈥檚 acting president, Hugh Porter.
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鈥淢y dad sort of slowed the car down and I got out, and he picked me up four years later,鈥 Mr Porter recalled of his own experience at Yale University. 鈥淭hat is not the case鈥 for many students today, he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big family investment in a different way than it was.鈥
Money and the wider economy may explain much of why Hampshire can鈥檛 do what a place like Reed can. Hiring staff to support students is expensive, and Hampshire was given little seed money by its academic founders a half-century ago. Its current endowment of about $52 million (拢40.3 million) is less than a 10th of that of Reed.
The reality is that students don鈥檛聽necessarily know what to study next, and colleges are struggling with the cost of guiding them through a complex and shifting set of choices. Yet, post-higher education, these same students will enter into a workplace demanding exactly those kinds of abilities and services.
Among other things, said Christina Paxson, president of Brown University, the Hampshire experience should serve as another warning that creating a future generation of Americans constantly retraining themselves for a fast-changing workplace will not come easy.
Rhode Island-based Brown does allow its students to create their own majors; however, only a small minority choose to do so, unlike at Hampshire, where the entire student body聽does, Professor Paxson said.
And while Hampshire appears to have been built on the assumption that such an open course structure would reduce costs, the reality, Professor Paxson said, is that it is more expensive.
鈥淕iving students a lot of responsibility and freedom in putting together their own curriculum and education requires probably more faculty time rather than less,鈥 she said.
Students 鈥渘eed someone to really help them understand: what is neuroscience, and what can you learn if you study economics, and how do different things fit together鈥, Professor Paxson said. Guiding them 鈥渋s resource-intensive. It鈥檚 not something that students can do completely on their own.鈥
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Brown, with a $3.8 billion endowment, can manage that, she said. Hampshire, apparently, cannot.
鈥淗ampshire has been a really wonderful experience for many, many students,鈥 Professor Paxson said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 trying to do something that requires a lot of resources without much in the way of resources.鈥
Most students, even the high performers, want to be told what to study, said Howard Woolf, director of the Experimental College at Tufts University, which offers small, participation-based and interdisciplinary courses.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think people are inherently proactive,鈥 Mr Woolf said. 鈥淚 think they want to go to a college where they鈥檙e going to have structure and be told 鈥榟ere鈥檚 what you have to do to be successful鈥.鈥
As such, the idea that large numbers of US workers will somehow know to stop every few years, and figure out what areas of supplemental education they should acquire for their next job, seems wishful, Mr Porter acknowledged.
鈥淚t鈥檚 asking too much of workers,鈥 he said.
Professor Paxson agreed. 鈥淲orkers aren鈥檛 going to wake up one day and say, 鈥極K, now it鈥檚 time for me to learn a new programming language or reinvent my career,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淧eople may know they need it, but they may not know exactly what to do to get it.鈥
The solution for the broader US workforce, Professor Paxson said, is likely going to require a lot more coordination between the corporate world and higher education than has been seen so far.
Another possible result, Mr Porter said, was that Americans might realise the need to fund their education system better.
鈥淭here鈥檚 some point at which paying people to be teachers is something we might need to do,鈥 he said.

For its part, Hampshire is focused at the moment on looking inward. Professor Nelson聽resigned聽as president earlier this month, after facing pushback to her idea of seeking a partner with which the college could merge. She and others have suggested that Hampshire by itself simply isn鈥檛 big enough to cope with the inevitable loss of students who can鈥檛 handle a design-your-major model and a free-flowing course environment.
Professor Hexter did try during his tenure a decade ago to expand Hampshire by creating a master鈥檚 programme. But he faced pushback from faculty, who were fearful of diluting what is in essence a master鈥檚-type approach at the undergraduate level. He and Professor Nelson also agreed that Hampshire wasn鈥檛 proactive enough over the years in publicising its聽unique聽mission.
Hampshire may also just be an idea whose time has聽, given that short-term job training is taking precedence in higher education over any ideals of long-term human growth. The 1960s and 1970s produced at least a few dozen such experimental institutions, Mr Woolf said. The surviving models, such as his聽own聽Experimental College at Tufts, are just portions of larger institutions.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e basically all gone,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey either got reabsorbed or they died.鈥
The shift reflects a broader sense of pessimism hanging over higher education, Mr Porter said.
鈥淚t was started, in some ways, at the tail end of the heyday of funding for higher education,鈥 he said of Hampshire. 鈥淚n a way, it鈥檚 symbolic of a kind of optimism about higher education.鈥
Still, he said, the聽suddenness聽of the聽situation聽鈥 with聽shifts聽that include Professor Nelson鈥檚聽resignation, Hampshire鈥檚 accreditation coming under聽question, and the possibility of Hampshire not even accepting an incoming class for the next academic year 鈥 has been 鈥渇rightening to people鈥, Mr Porter said.
鈥淭hey hadn鈥檛 heard that anything was really wrong,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd then all of a sudden this prominent place seems to be evaporating.鈥
paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com
Academics and university leaders will discuss how universities can encourage innovative teaching and learning practices at 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Teaching Excellence Summit, which is taking place at Western University, in London, Ontario, Canada, from 4-6 June.
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Print headline:聽Experimental colleges: outdated model or future-proofing students?
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