|
Network
Meetings
Network
Resources
Network
Digest
Primary
Contact List
Benefits of
Membership
Snapshots of
Our Member Campuses
Presidents'
Declaration on Civic Responsibility
President's Statements on Civic Engagement
|
Presidents' Fourth of
July Declaration
on the Civic Responsibility
of Higher Education
The purpose of this statement
is to articulate the commitment of all sectors of higher education,
public and private, two- and four-year, to their civic purposes
and to identify the behaviors that will make that commitment
manifest. It was reviewed, refined and endorsed at a Presidents'
Leadership Colloquium convened by Campus Compact and the American
Council on Education at the Aspen Institute on June 29-July
1, 1999
Declaration
As presidents of colleges and universities, both
private and public, large and small, two-year and four-year, we
challenge higher education to reexamine its public purposes and
its commitments to the democratic ideal. We also challenge higher
education to become engaged, through actions and teaching, with
its communities.
We have a fundamental task to renew our role as
agents of our democracy. This task is both urgent and long-term.
There is growing evidence of disengagement of many Americans from
the communal life of our society, in general, and from the responsibilities
of democracy in particular. We share a special concern about the
disengagement of college students from democratic participation.
A chorus of studies reveals that students are not connected to
the larger purposes and aspirations of the American democracy.
Voter turnout is low. Feelings that political participation will
not make any difference are high. Added to this, there is a profound
sense of cynicism and lack of trust in the political process.
We are encouraged that more and more students are
volunteering and participating in public and community service,
and we have all encouraged them to do so through curricular and
co-curricular activity. However, this service is not leading students
to embrace the duties of active citizenship and civic participation.
We do not blame these college students for their attitudes toward
the democracy, rather we take responsibility to help them realize
the values and skills of our democratic society and their need
to claim ownership of it.
This country cannot afford to educate a generation
that acquires knowledge without ever understanding how that knowledge
can benefit society or how to influence democratic decision making.
We must teach the skills and values of democracy, creating innumerable
opportunities for our students to practice and reap the results
of the real, hard work of citizenship.
Colleges and universities have long embraced a mission
to educate students for citizenship. But now, with over two-thirds
of recent high school graduates, and ever larger numbers of adults,
enrolling in post secondary studies, higher education has an unprecedented
opportunity to influence the democratic knowledge, dispositions,
and habits of the heart that graduates carry with them into the
public square.
Higher education is uniquely positioned to help
Americans understand the histories and contours of our present
challenges as a diverse democracy. It is also uniquely positioned
to help both students and our communities to explore new ways
of fulfilling the promise of justice and dignity for all, both
in our own democracy and as part of the global community. We know
that pluralism is a source of strength and vitality that will
enrich our students education and help them to learn both
to respect difference and work together for the common good.
We live in a time when every sectorcorporate,
government and nonprofitis being mobilized to address community
needs and reinvigorate our democracy (Gardner, 1998). We cannot
be complacent in the face of a country where one out of five children
sleeps in poverty and one in six central cities has an unemployment
rate 50% or more above the national average, even as our economy
shows unprecedented strength. Higher educationits leaders,
students, faculty, staff, trustees and alumniremains a key
institutional force in our culture that can respond, and can do
so without a political agenda and with the intellectual and professional
capacities todays challenges so desperately demand. Thus,
for societys benefit and for the academys, we need
to do more. Only by demonstrating the democratic principles we
espouse, can higher education effectively educate our students
to be good citizens.
How can we realize this vision of institutional
public engagement? It will, of course, take as many forms as there
are types of colleges and universities. And it will require our
hard work, as a whole, and within each of our institutions. We
will know we are successful by the robust debate on our campuses,
and by the civic behaviors of our students. We will know it by
the civic engagement of our faculty. We will know it when our
community partnerships improve the quality of community life and
the quality of the education we provide.
To achieve these goals, our presidential leadership
is essential but, by itself, it is not enough. Faculty, staff,
trustees and students must help craft and act upon our civic missions
and responsibilities. We must seek reciprocal partnerships with
community leaders, such as those responsible for elementary and
secondary education. To achieve our goals we must define them
in ways that inspire our institutional missions and help measure
our success. We have suggested a Campus Assessment of Civic Responsibility
that will help in this task. It is a work in progress. We ask
you to review the draft and to ask yourself what aspects of this
can work on your campus and also to share with others practices
that are not on this list.
We ask other college presidents to join us in seeking
recognition of civic responsibility in accreditation procedures,
Carnegie classifications, and national rankings and to work with
Governors, State Legislators, and State Higher Education Offices
on state expectations for civic engagement in public systems.
We believe that the challenge of the next millennium
is the renewal of our own democratic life and reassertion of social
stewardship. In celebrating the birth of our democracy, we can
think of no nobler task than committing ourselves to helping catalyze
and lead a national movement to reinvigorate the public purposes
and civic mission of higher education. We believe that now and
through the next century, our institutions must be vital agents
and architects of a flourishing democracy. We urge all of higher
education to join us.
Vermont Signatories
We invite you to add your campus to this list. If the president
or chancellor of your institution wishes to sign on they should
send an e-mail to Amy
McGlashan. We urge all readers to use this document
to encourage dialogue on your campus among administrators, faculty,
staff and students.
Bennington College
Norwich University
Burlington College
Saint Michael's College
Castleton State College
School for International Training
College of Saint Joseph
Southern Vermont College
Community College of Vermont
Sterling College
Goddard College |
Trinity College of Vermont
Green Mountain College
University of Vermont
Johnson State College
Vermont Law School
Marlboro College
Vermont Technical College
Middlebury College
Woodbury College
New England Culinary Institute
|
|