| San
Bernardino, Fresno, Chico... These Universities save the state
This
article was originally published in the Oct. 23, 2005 edition
of “The Los Angeles Times.” Kevin Starr, state
librarian emeritus, is a university professor and professor
of history at USC. His latest book, “California: A History,”
was published in October by Random House.
People used to come to California to find a better life. State
government, by and large, was there to help. Today, it's of
little solace. That's one reason November's special election
(was), in effect, a referendum on state government itself.
California
has become expensive, competitive, demanding. The California
dream was historically anchored in people's hope for a better
life. Today, these people—mainly the middle class—work
the hardest and the longest to make ends meet. And there's
only one part of state government that is clearly there still
to help ordinary people reach their dreams: the California
State University system, an institution that has survived
from what sometimes seems the long-gone golden age of California
promise.
The CSU
system is not just a government agency, however. It is, rather,
a primary expression of the collective sovereignty of the
people of California. It is the primary means and cutting
edge in the struggle for California to sustain itself as a
viable, competitive and humane society for ordinary citizens.
One could write a history of contemporary California's creation
almost exclusively by examining the rise and development of
this institution.
Today,
this great university grants nearly half of the state's baccalaureate
degrees and a third of the master's degrees. It bestows 65
percent of the business baccalaureate degrees and more than
half of the agricultural business and agricultural engineering
baccalaureate degrees. And it trains 89 percent of the state's
professionals in criminal justice, 87 percent of the teachers
and related staff, 87 percent of the social workers and 82
percent of the public administrators.
The CSU
system, in short, is keeping California afloat while offering
poor and middle-class people a continuing opportunity to move
into the sort of well-paying jobs a college degree affords.
Few state agencies possess such a clear-cut and necessary
role.
The University
of California, according to the Master Plan for Higher Education
adopted in 1960, has as its primary mission research and teaching.
The California State University, by contrast, has as its primary
mission the education and training of Californians through
a fusion program of instruction, applied research and preparation
for employment.
These
distinct missions cannot over time remain so clear-cut. A
number of departments in the CSU system—such as Cal
State Fresno's viticulture and enology program—are at
least as distinguished, in research terms, as comparable departments
at UC, despite the heavier teaching load borne by the CSU
faculty.
This distinction
between what should be learned (research) and how that knowledge
should be passed on (teaching) cannot in the long run be sustained.
From this perspective, the University of California has to
reconsider its policy of turning so much undergraduate instruction
over to graduate students. And California State University
cannot continue to be so limited in its research agenda, especially
in areas such as education, its primary expertise—hence
the recent announcement that the CSU system will now be authorized
to grant a doctorate in that field.
Still,
while the University of California will continue to enjoy
the affection and loyalty of its graduates and the respect
of the larger population, it cannot by definition become a
populist institution. It is a research institution in the
public service, with $1 billion of its $15 billion budget
coming these days from private sources.
Although
it also is increasingly ambitious in seeking private support,
the CSU system, by contrast, is first and foremost a public
enterprise: a direct creation of state government and, these
days, perhaps the best connection state government enjoys
with the people. Even our embattled legislators seem to understand
this. Many of them, after all, are graduates of one or another
CSU campus.
— Kevin Starr
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