SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1964 THE MIC.UIGAN DAILY PAGE THREV SUNDAY, DECEMB1~R 6,1904 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIIRETI Oxford Makes Crucial' Self-Study Education Leads Poverty War OXFORD, England-In a white- paneled examination room on High. Street, Oxford ,niversity is conducting a study of itself so searching and crucial that it may alter the course of higher educa- tion in Britain. In three meetings a week, two of them public, a commission of seven university teachers and of- ficers has read more than 100 statements so far, heard 2-16 per- sons a session and contemplated or questioned their criticisms of patterns of Oxford education that have been sacrosanct for cen- turies. Hand-Formed Mind? , Is Oxford right to try to pro- duce the "hand-formed" mind, the kind of graduate who is steep- ed in the classics or drilled in a narrow. field of learning? Should Oxford try to produce the "good all-rounder" as was suggested to the commission by the Federation of British Indus- tries? Should Oxford try to meet in- dustry's persistent demands for fewer academic specialists and for more men and women of widely ranging interests and learning? Should it admit more women un- dergraduates, now outnumbered five to one by the ,men? New Ferment at School Since the commission was ap- pointed by the university last Easter to inquire into the role Ox- ford should play in higher educa- tion, the university has been in a new mood of ferment. Lord Franks, who was provost' of Worcester College and is chair- man of the commission, has called the inquiry a period of reflective and constructive dialogue. He said that it might last two years. It may seem to be more than that to the rest of Britain 23 universities, which have tradition- ally looked to Oxford as a vir- tually unassailable example for themselves. The inquiry has brought to the surface some deep-rooted fears that Oxford, by believing too fer- vently in the legend of its own superiority, was in danger of be- ing bypassed for lack of some clear, 20th-century thinking. A recurrent theme of criticism is that the weight of teaching at Oxford should be shifted from the tutorial system to lecture courses. Under the tutorial system, each undergraduate, as regards his studies, is under the immediate supervision of a fellow. The fel- lows are the scholars who form the governing body of each of Ox- ford's independent colleges. Another criticism is that these colleges should be altered to pro- vide for more exchange between them and for a stronger central authority in the university. A physics professor, R. E.Peierls, conceded that in theory the tu- torial system gives the student the advantage of individual guidance. But in practice, the professor con- tended, the tutor's knowledge has often narrowed too far for the student. And the colleges often find it as easy to offeri a few in- spiring lectures as a great many mediocre tutorials. A botany professor, C. D. Dar- lington, contended that Oxford was choking itself by its system of independent colleges and tu- torials, and abandoning the pur- pose for which it was founded eight centuries ago-the exchange of ideas among men of different generations and different dis- ciplines. There have been defenses, most- ly by traditionalists, but two de- fenses of a different sort were submitted recently.. One of them, by the student council, regretted that so much evidence had been given to show that tutorjals, especially in the sciences, were a waste of time. "It seems unfortunate that the study of teaching methods has been divided into arts and sciences as it has," the council said. "Often the differences between large and small faculties are equally im- portant, and to some extent each subject has its own peculiar prob- lems." D. C. M. Yardley, a fellow at St. Edmund Hall and.,a tutor in law, wrote to the commission'that, it would be a pity to see the colleges of Oxford lose their in- dependence. Experience in some American universities, he suggest- ed, showed that university teach- ers there often had to "muzzle their own views so as not to prej- udice their careers." Copyright, 1964, The New Yor1 Times Anti-poverty programs unveiled recently by R. Sargent Shriver, director of the war on poverty, put the spotlight on the fact that edu- cation is the heart of the anti- poverty efforts. The proposals presented by Shriver contain these education elements: 1) Community Action Program. Approximately $250 million will be, available for the first year of oper- ation to help communities to battle poverty through preventive action. Education is the chief in- gredient--estimated at 60 per cent of the entire community action budget. It includes after-school study centers, summer programs, week- end instruction., enrichment such as New York's "Higher Horizon which sends slum children to con- certs or theater and-possibly the cornerstone of all preventive effort' -- pre-school instruction for 3- year-old ghetto children and day- care centers for the most needy. Cities that have pilot programs of their own already under way will be eligible for support-but only to expand their programs. A "4maintenance of effort clause,"~ written' into each grant, assures, that there will be, no relaxation of local spending. Significantly, community action program officials prefer to chan- nel funds through some body other than the local Board of Edu- cation. "Schools by themselves can't solve the problem," one ex- pert said. 2) Work -Study Program. Ad- ministered by the United States Office of Education, this program hopes to enroll large numbers of needy students in colleges and universities, while providing jobs for them at the same time. The limit on outside work is set at 15 hours a week. Some of the jobs will be subsidized campus em- by the Department of Labor, this program will have available $110 to $150 million to help about 150,000, youths between the ages of 16 and 21 who are either out of school and unemployed or are about to drop out of school and into the chronically unemployed trap of the unskilled. Some will go into community jobs-in hospitals, laboratories and social agencies. Others will get jobs in school cafeterias and custodians' offices. The stress will be on getting youths back to school, even if only part-time, and to create lasting work habits. An official cited a re- quest by a professor at the Uni- versity of Maryland f or 8 or 10 youths who would take care of animals used in scientific experi- ments. The hope in such work is that it will get young people inter- ested in fields they had not even considered open to them. 4) Job Corps. This may well be the educationally most revolution- ary plan. Administered by the Eco- nomic Opportunity Office, it will have $150 million for the first fiscal year ending on June 30. Aimed also at youths between the ages of 16 and 21, it will establish 25 'to 30 centers for men, in or near cities, on such sites as ob- solete military posts. Each center will house 1,000 to 2,000 men. An- other 25 to 30 smaller centers for about 250 women each will be established in vacant hotels or motels. Copyright, 1964, The New York Times STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION, New Aency Considers Enrollment Boom R. SARGENT SHRIVER LANSING (JP) - About nine months after Michigan's new eight-member State Board of Edu- cation takes office, the state's college enrollment is expected to jump by about 17,000-enough to, populate another major university. "We've, got all kinds of prob- lems," according to Peter Oppewall of Grand Rapids, one member of the new board created by the 1963 Constitution to take over policy making duties from the superintendent of public instruc- tion. In addition, the constitution has given them the new and am- biguous assignment of coordinat- ing higher education and advising the Legislature on education fi- nances. No Meetings Yet The eight members, all Demo- crats elected Nov.'- 3, have not held any official meetings yet and are not sure at this point what the board's first steps will be and how it will meet Michigan's edu- cational problems. Many feel an important step will be to alert the public to the facts about education-facts such as the expected 17,000 increase in college enrollment, and the money needed to handle it.' "The board will have a very im- portant educating job of its own to do," Donald M. D. Thurber of Grosse Pointe observes. Thurber, a former Regent here, believes almost everyone is in- terested in schools. Thus the board, he hopes, can "capitalize on interest which already exists and turn it into an informed in- terest, based on facts-not an easy task. "If you tell the needs cogently, truthfully and often enough, rem- edies do follow," he adds. "You get nowhere if you hold back the needs." Leon Fill of Huntington Woods suggests a committee of prominent citizens to do a selling :job on education's needs. "If people are told, 'these the needs,' they'll go for it," Fill said. are Dr. "With the board as large as it is, we hope to get to a lot of places and meet a lot of people," Marilyn Jean Kelley of Albion declares. Fill says some 3,400 new class- rooms are needed and some 5000' should be replaced at the secon- dary level. More teachers are needed, too, he said. Oppewall calls for reversing a; trend in which, he said, "costs have gone up faster than the state's share," forcing local dis- tricts to pay a higher and higher percentage. In addition, he contends, "most people don't realize how long col- leges have put off expansion be- cause of tight budgets in the past. Since 1959 they haven't been getting their share." Recent Tune This has been a recent theme of the University in Lansing. In 1"958, this institution received a, budgetary cut because of the state's financial plight. Gov. George Romney warned educators last month, though, that telling legislators about education- al needs is not enough. Public opinion must be on the educator's side if they are to sways legisla- tors, he said. "Public relations will be perhaps one of the biggest problems," the Rev. Charles Mortonr of Detroit agrees.- Morton also indicates another matter likely to come up for board consideration - preschool educa- tion, in which youngsters In cul- turally deprived areas start formal education before going to kinder- garten. This is "possibly the best attack we can make on poverty, especial- ly in urban areas," he says. n Oppewall montions.'; cases in which, for example, the mother is working and the father is not around, and the child at kinder- garter age cannot yet count. The child who already is behind has less motivation to stay in school, Morton says, and is more likely to become the school drop- out. 'Nowadays, a dropout is almost sure to end up on relief rolls sooner or later," Oppewall notes. And, he added, "society has changed so much that even a high school graduate isn't sure of employment." Oppewall was among several board members suggesting more technical training. "Jobs in subprofessional areas are going begging," Thomas Bren- nan of Dearborn explains. "We must take care of all our children's needs in the field of training," Fill observes. Brennan brings up another area -prejudice--which he feels edu- cation should do more to combat. "Education hasn't even begun to meet the challenge of the social revolution in this nation," he says. "There are walls built in people's minds more impregnable than the Berlin Wall. It's harder to move from Detroit to some suburbs than from East to West Berlin. "We're deluding ourselves if we don't face these problems," he said. A number of members favor developing 'an education master 1plan. ployment, but others may actually be in the community action pro- gram, such as tutoring. About $71 million will be av il- able for payment to the students. 3) Work Training. Administered W Orl d News Roundup By The Associated Press SAIGON-A United States military review board has reported South Vietnamese troops were lax in taking security measures around the United States Bien Hoa air base when Communist guerrillas pounded it with mortars Nov. 1, killing four Americans and knocking out 27 U.S. planes., In that attack on the air base, the Communist Viet Cong moved into the surrounding jungles, carefully set up and aimed their mor- tars and lobbed about 100 shells4 in a predawn raid. Bien Hoa air base is 15 miles STARVING STU outside Saigon. CHOOSE THE MOST THOUGHTFUL GIFT B BOOK"S U The Gift that is open more than once Robert Carrier ... Great Dishes Of The World $12.95 Lawrence Thompson .. Selected Letters Of Robert Frost........ .. .....$10.00 Douglas MacArthur . . . Reminiscenses................................$ 6.95 New York Times ... The Kennedy Years.......... .. ...... .. ...$16.50 Roland H. Bainton ... 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