Guest Column Increasing College Tuition Impacts Jewish Community W ith students now returned to college campuses, families are again concerned about ever- increasing tuition at our public colleges and universities. While this is an issue all Americans face, it has particular impor- tance to the Jewish community No ethnic group in America has benefit- ted more from access to higher education than the Jews. Many in our community are the children, grandchildren or great-grand- children of immigrants who had virtually no access to college education in Eastern Europe. Among the rewards those immi- grants found in America was the oppor- tunity for their offspring to attend public colleges and universities, where enormous opportunities presented themselves at either no or very modest cost. While many of the most prestigious pri- vate universities restricted the number of Jews, public colleges and universities, par- ticularly the great state universities across the country, generally welcomed Jewish students, no matter how large their num- bers, offering them tuition so low that even those from the poorest homes could afford to attend. As a result, a flood of young Jews became the first in their families to attend and graduate from college. Public higher education thus became the "portal to the American dream." Imbued with a love of learning that has characterized Jews since biblical times, these college-educated Americans have excelled in remarkable ways. While Jews make up only about 2 percent of the popu- lation of the country, over the past 90 years they have accounted for more than 35 percent of all U.S. Nobel Prize recipients. In fields like medicine, Jews make up almost 40 percent of all U.S. Nobel Laureates, about No Excuses from page 40 director of RAVSAK, the Jewish Community Day School Network, stated, "It takes a great deal of fuel to power Jewish literacy, especially when Jewish literacy and Hebrew literacy are intertwined [as I believe it must be]. The engines of Jewish literacy — engines that drive Jewish citizenship, peoplehood, spiritual meaning, ethical living and intellectualism ... [cannot be fueled] from Sunday school and sum- mer camp (only)." Day Schools Are Key As such, day schools truly need to become a top priority for the Jewish community. That means adequate fund- ing to make them more affordable and to train teachers to provide the neces- sary and effectual education for this century. Equally important is funding for Jewish camps and for meaningful infor- 20 times greater than their share of the pop- ulation. Similarly, Jews have accounted for a vastly disproportionate number of Pulitzer Prize winners in literature and the arts. And it has always been the case that pub- lic colleges and universities have attracted the greatest number of Jewish students. It's thus no surprise that more members of the Detroit Jewish community are graduates of Wayne State University than any other insti- tution of higher learning. At the University of Michigan, Jews account for more than 15 percent of the 43,000 students on campus. Jews now attend college at about twice the rate of the U.S. population in general. So, with all this good news of a community committed to and benefitting from higher educa- tion, what's the problem? Why can't we just keep doing what we've been doing for decades? The answer is that the shocking disinvestment in public colleges and universities, while affecting the entire nation, will have an especially severe adverse impact on the Jewish community. When Michigan invested heavily in higher education, many in our community were the direct beneficiaries of low tuition. The idea that students would borrow tens of thousands of dollars to attend college was simply unheard of. That meant, until very recently, those who graduated could and did marry in their early 20s, often right after, if not during college. Armed with degrees, they could and did quickly find good jobs, allowing them to move out of their parents' homes, start families and careers and, importantly, become active participants in Jewish communal life. The burden of repaying loans incurred simply to attend college just did not exist. That burden is now present for an ever- growing number of students. While all America is suffering from the decline in support of higher education, its impact on the Jewish community will be magnified for several reasons. Except for Orthodox Jews, the American Jewish community has among the lowest birth rates of any group in America. And Jews are an aging population: our average age is 7 years older than the nation as a whole. Our young people, equipped with fine educations that we've worked so hard to provide, are increasingly interested in pur- suing careers, thus postponing marriage and parenthood. This means that any external forces that further delay marriage or the raising of families cannot but further negatively affect our demographics. A generation that is burdened by devoting years to paying off student loans is far less likely to carry on the traditions of tzeda- kah and communal engagement that have so enriched Jewish life in America for the last 100 years. Government policies that create finan- cial barriers to reaching well-rounded adulthood will, in time, seriously dimin- ish Jewish communal life in America. In Michigan, those damaging policies have been on full display under both the current and prior administrations, as disinvest- ment in higher education has become the accepted way to balance our state's budget. mal Jewish experiences. Our rabbis and community leaders need to step up and lead the charge to promote serious formal and informal learning experiences that engage and challenge. Too many of our rabbis give tepid support at best; and sadly, many of our community leaders fail to see the value and critical importance of a day school education for their own children. If we keep doing the same things and our leaders keep making the same deci- sions, why would we expect different results? Our full energy and commitment must be focused on these three areas: day schools, summer camps and rich infor- mal Jewish experiences. As a realist, I recognize that the majority of Jewish children will not attend day schools any time soon; as an optimist, I can always have that as a goal. Until that day, we need to admit that "the Emperor has no clothes," that supplementary religious education in its current, diluted state, does not work to produce committed, involved Jews. We need to change this. It is time for synagogues and temples to increase the hours of supplementary religious school education, to create meaningful and purposeful curriculum and to train teachers to be effective so that the increased hours are impactful. Equally important, we must bring back and strengthen opportunities for informal education in the synagogues and temples. And if the synagogues and temples will not do it, the day schools should step up and create meaningful supplementary programs, both formal and informal, for those children not in the day schools. We like to tell ourselves that Judaism is just another consumer product, but it isn't. The fact that most Jews today view Judaism as a choice makes it that Reining In Costs Adjusted for inflation, Michigan's funding for higher education has dropped 50 per- cent in the past decade. This is, of course, why tuition has climbed so high at the 15 Michigan public colleges and universities. Declining Support A decade ago, state dollars accounted for about two-thirds of Wayne State University's budget, with tuition providing one-third. Today, the situation is reversed. And while our state's support for its highly regarded public education system is falling dramatically, other parts of the budget are climbing astronomically. Michigan now allocates 50 percent more on operating prisons than it does on supporting higher education. This is not good for the state of Michigan, not good for young people and particularly not good for the Jews. While the organized Jewish community is active in so many significant public policy debates, not nearly enough has been said about the importance of adequately funding public higher education. If the state of Michigan enacted a tax of $25,000 on all 22-year-olds before they could marry or begin a family, the public would be outraged. But in a very devious way, that's exactly what's been happening. This is a Jewish communal problem that cries out for attention. Unless we and our leaders speak with a unified voice and demand adequate public support for higher education, the pathway so successfully fol- lowed by the Jewish community for the past 100 years will, to our lasting regret, be irreparably damaged. ❑ Eugene Driker is an attorney and on the Board of Governors at Wayne State University, Detroit. much more important that we remind ourselves, our leaders and our families why it matters to be an active and com- mitted member of the Jewish people and why it is worth the time and effort. It will take courage and effort for our rabbis and community leaders to step up and actually make this happen — to go against the conventional wisdom and the majority culture. As Jews, we are counter-cultural, and we should embrace and celebrate it. We can keep lamenting the trends and the causes for another 40 years, or we can come together as leaders, focus our resources and build a generation of literate, committed and active Jews who live comfortably and meaningfully in both worlds: our larger secular world and our rich Jewish world. ❑ Steve Freedman is head of Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit, Farmington Hills. October 31 • 2013 41