*Feature Section C, r SirV ~IItAl Feature Section VOL. XXXV. No. 80 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 1925 EIGHT PAGES WHERE, oH WHERE HAS AsTrAbs CULTURE GONE? rf.e Has The Student Lost All Interest In Things Intel] Cultural Aspects Of College Life? Do Extra-Curricula Activities Overshadow The Old Mr. Angell Presents His Report On Methods of Increasing Intellectual Interest At Michigan By Robert C. Angell Editor's Note: Owing to the typographical ar- rangement in which this report is printed, it will be impossible to include the footnotes giving credit for quotations used. The Present State of Intellectual Interest HERE are few college or university facul- ties in the United States that have not some complaint to make of the intellectual life of their students. Books, magazine articles, committee reports, all bear witness to the distressing lack of keen interest in things of the mind among the men and ,women in our institutions of higher learning. Especially subject to criticism are the students in the colleges of liberal arts, both colleges which exist separately and those connected with a university. The University of Michigan is no exception to the general rule. The atmosphere of the campus is one of intellectual apathy, rather than intellectual en- thusiasm. Many professional students, to be sure, do exhibit commendable interest in their specialties. All too frequently, however, this is inspired not by a burning curiosity to know the truth, but by the worthy but relatively commonplace desire to be suc- cessful in the competition of after life. Were it not for this obvious relationship between good scholar- ship and professional efficiency and the fact that the specialized schools get the benefit of the weeding out process conducted by the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts, the professional students would probably have no greater intellectual curiosity than do those in the Literary College. Through force of circumstances, however, the latter has to suffer. That it represents the least satisfactorytstate of intellectual interest and that it comprises half the student body would seem reasons enough for making it central to this study. But there is the further consideration that, since a large proportion of men and women in professional courses spend from one to four years in the Literary College, any heightening of intellectual enthusiasm among the latter's stu- dents would react favorably on the other schools and colleges. The background of the majority of entering freshmen is not conducive to a high degree of in- tellectual interest. As an eminent literary critic has said: "Our teaching is strewn upon a bare and barren hinterland where, finding no soil to root in, it dries up and blows away." The two dominant characteristics of the times in which we live, com- mercialism and speed, have led us to regard the automobile magnate and the aeroplane pilot as the true heroes, the scholar being but an uninteresting recluse who is neither trying to make a fortune nor spending his life in the endless search for a noisy, speedy and otherwise immoderate good time. Twen- tieth century children grow up in a world of hasty and superficial living of which newspaper scandals, professional athletics, and somewhat sordid or sen- timental moving pictures are typical expressions. The quiet evening at home is well-nigh a thing of the past in American families. Automobiles and moving pictures lure adults as well as children away from the family circle where formerly the taste for good reading was acquired and stimulating conversation carried on. The whole task of education has been given over to the primary and secondary schools-- good institutions, but quite incapable of combatting successfully all the forces opposing their efforts. What a contrast with the situation in Germany dur- ing Munsterberg's youth! "The teachers were sil- ently helped by the spirit which prevailed in our homes with regard to the school work. The school had the right of way; our parents reinforced our be- lief in the work and our respect for the teachers. A reprimand in the school was a shadow in our home life; a word of praise in the school was a ray of sunshine for the household." Nowadays neither the parents nor the children are primarily interested in the school work. The former are dis- tracted by other duties and amusements, the latter find the element of emotional adventure in the learn- ing process insufficient to compete with the many more colorful pursuits at hand. The difficulties which the liberal arts college in a state university faces are compounded chiefly of two elements: -intellectual indifference and num- bers. Either alone would present a formidable prob- lcm, but togetherethey give riseto a well-nigh in- soluble one. "Great numbers have laid education under necessity. They have compelled close organ- ization, and organization means mechanics, and me- chanics means artificiality." The freshman throngs which yearly tax the capacity of our recitation rooms require large classes, formal testing of knowledge, credit by hours, grading systems, ab- spend a pleasant four years and emerge on a sup- erior social level; some to distinguish themselves in kthetics or other extra-curricular activities; a small minority to increase the meaning of their lives by achieving a better understanding of man and nature. College is no longer, if it ever was, solely a place for those who wish to become cultured; it is a so- cial practice ground where men and women learn to make friends and to carry on mutual undertak- ings, where they acquire a certain amount of polish and enjoy, free from worries, the most delightful period of life. It is small wonder that the intellec- tually eager are almost unremarked in the throng. Coupled with apathy toward things of the mind is the lack of a sufficient foundation of knowledge upon which to rear a well-fashioned structure. "Now, when all classes come to college, the college must give that active, positive background which in former generations was prepared for itoutside. It must create the intellectual stomach as well as present the food." There is no need to rehearse here the facts con- cerning the intellectual life of students in the Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts at Michi gan. The situation is presumably not much better and not much worse than that existing in other large American universities. Twenty hours of prep- aration a week outside of the class rooms is lib- eral average. The student's interest in the ex- ternal, rather than the vital, is too apparent to re- quire exposition. Those forms of achievement are coveted which give immediate and obvious glory. Places on athletic teams, editorships of student pub- lications, presidencies of student organizations, are sought with unflagging zeal, and scholarship rele- gated to a subordinate position. What with athletic practices, committee meetings, play and musical club rehearsals, moving pictures, dances, intercollegiate gamles, and-what is worse-hours and hours of idle talk about these and other diversions, little time is left for the principal purpose of the college study! It is discouraging enough for the college to have to work with such material. It is more discouraging to have tre standards of the general American life constantly imposed upon the institution, as in the case of intrcollegiate athketics, thus effectively preventing the development of higher aims among students. The evil influence of many alumni in glor- ifying the less important features of college life is well known. As former Dean Keppel has said, "Tie interest of many an alumnus in the team of his col- lege is really no more academic than is that of the Chicago man in the "Cubs" and many a father holds forth upon his son's performance at college exactly as he would upon those of a promising three-year- old in his stable." Many of the so-called student activities are, of course, valuable. Perhaps all would be if they were entered into solely as a means of self-expression and training in cooperation. Too often, however, the incentive is the desire for prominence. Other reasons swell the number of candidates, but if the editor of The Daily, the captain of the baseball team, and the president of the Union were not heroes in the eyes of undergraduates, these activities would lose much of their charm. Nor is the academic work wholly free from the taint of personal aggran- dizement. The idea of brain activity as a pleasure in itself, said to be common among the French, is quite foreign to the American student's mind. le does not revel in the discovery of truth nor is he keenly desirous of acquiring that breadth of knowl- edge and that depth of sympathy which is true cul- ture. Many make brilliant records for whom the great fields of intellectual endeavor have little charm. Some are aiming for the Phi Beta. Kappa key or another such mark of achievement. Others pile up honor points as a miser his gold pieces. The Utilization of Student Sef-Ass- ertiveness as the Basic Means of hIceauing Interlectual Interest From the point of view of one who wishes to see an increase in intellectual interest the mostprom- ising factor in a generally distressing situation Is the strength of the self-assertive impulse among students. As a rule they like to feel that what they are doing is counting for something. Theirs is an eager, energetic, confident nature. This is due part- ly to their youth but chiefly to the American spirit of individualism-that aura of suggestion which ren- ders children even at a tender age extraordinarily ambitious. Although at present this impulse finds its outlet for the most part in athletics and other extra-curricular activities there is no reason to sup-j >ose that, if properly handled, it cannot be so di- I rected as to remodel the whole collegiate structure. If scholarship could be substituted as the channel through which it flows, the results might be aston- ishing. The achievement of this condition is the Solely Cultural Editorial comment the country over having been aroused by the release of Mr. Angell's report, The Daily will publish in this section the complete text of the paper, dividing it into three installments of which this is the first. We reprint below an editorial from the New Yore Times as an example of the com- ment mentioned. (From the New Yorle Times, issue of Friday, Dec. 19, 1924.) Refuting an early prediction, the West has encountered difficulty in making culture hum. From the University of Michigan, Pro- fessor R. C. Angell laments that "college no longer is solely a place for those who wish to become cultured." But his woe is only a plaintive idyll compared to the tragic gloom which emanates from the University of Minne- sota. Through the pages of The American Mercury, Richard Burton asks Why Go to College ?-and finds no answer. Professor Burton is for a process of whole- sale exclusion. His heart is hardened against the ' gentleman-loafer," the "picturesque, but- ter fly type of student." That was to be ex- pected. More significant is his diatribe against the dig, the grind, the shark, the poler, the swatter-"the word varies, the genus is the same." This faithful plodder, this monster of "machine-like assiduity," he describes as a young man or woman of mediocre or worse calibre who lacks initiative, personality and that creative energy which translates curiosity in learning into genuine performance." And he hurls him headlong from the haunts of the Muses together with the painted, fluttering but- terfly. One wonders just who will be left. The answer brings the tragic curtain of the fifth act. On the one hand Professor Burton excludes the young men of family and breeding who "take college as a matter of course, because their predecessors did," and on the other he is even more down upon "those who go to college not because their parents did, but because they did not." Thus nobody remains but the Fac- ulty. For such an institution, solely cultural, there exists a happy precedent. All Souls' College at Oxford is inhabited only by dons, except that they have four or five "scholars"- undergraduates who do the chapel business for them. It may seem to be a self-limited para- dise, doomed to extinction. But there are nine- teen other colleges, swarming with sharks and swatters, with gentlemen butterflies and with youths whose forebears went to college or did not, from whose non-cultural activities, dons of All Souls' are derived as a. by-product. From Professor Angell's outgiving one sur- mises that college was once a place where young men were not at all interested in things "external," but deeply interested in everything "vital." Thee principal purposes of college life were eagely embraced, while the "forms of achievement" now "coveted" were piously scorned, namely, "places on athletic teams, editorships of student publications, and presi- dencies of student organizations." That being the case, there was no possibility of the "hero- worship" of athletes, editors and Presidents which Professor Angell so sternly deprecates. One wonders what Carlyle would say, or Mat- thew Arnold, who describes Oxford so lovingly as the haunt of young barbarians, all at play. Would they have excluded the activities most warmly human, native and dynamic in young men? Surely there is something to say for the conception of culture, of which Professor Burt- on is so scornful, as "a sort of contagion; you get it by being exposed to it." Is there, in fine, such a thing as being "solely cultural," a sort of Typhoid Mary of Muses? Or is culture an overtone, a fine es- sence of other things-of personality and init- iative and creative energy in any of the great I :creased only as intellectual effort and achievement satisfy these desires. If the bait as presented is not attractive to the fish, we must so alter its shape, size, color, position or state of motion as to overcome the fish's prejudices. Else we shall angle forever in vain. Not that we -must try to suit the taste of every fish in the pool; but we must meet the wants of most of those considered worth fishing for. Since to the student success in after life seems very remotely connected with intellectual interest in college, this desire is of little help for this study. Speeches by eminent men testifying to the value of scholarly habits in undergraduate days might have some effect; the publication of the college grades of Michigan or other university graduates who are in Who's Who would have much more. Th most promising lines of approach to the gen- eral problem are the endeavors to enhance the pres- tige of intellectual achievement and to procure a sense of self-expression in the performance of intel- lectual tasks. Though scholarship is seldom asso- ciated in a student's mind with self-expression or prestige, the possibility of their being closely iden- tilled is readily admitted by undergraduates. Hence attempts along these lines are the central considera- tions in any scheme of making college life more alive intellectually. If an intellectual elite which is admired can once be secured and means be de- veloped for the adequate expression of one's indi- viduality in college work, the problem will be solved. Though positive measures should be chiefly relied i on, the; e is little doubt that, once the shift toward intellectual development as the primary aim of col- l lege life is started, any steps taken to lessen the ever-present distractions will facilitate the process. A Method of Enhancing the Prestige Attaching to Intellectual Achievements The securing of an intellectual elite possessing prestige among students must be a long, slow pro- cess. The end will only be achieved when a change amounting almost to a revolution in student senti- ment has occurred. Undergraduates must first be t rought to realize that scholarship is to be admired lbecause it is worth while from the points of view of individual development and social welfare. This is a difficult task and one which will prove especial- ly disappointing to those who anticipate quick re- sults. But nothing is so likely to succeed in the long run as the granting of substantial privileges to the best students. It is curious how suddenly a man, ridiculed for devotion to his studies, becomes honored when he is chosen a Rhodes scholar. A beginning might be to take outstanding stud- ents on scientific expeditions or to let them share in solving problems brought to the University from outside. Honorary societies and departmental clubs might so reorganize as to furnish more opportuni- ties for intellectual companionship. The more of value which these organizations impart to their members, the more will students desire to be chosen and consequently the greater prestige will the for- tunate ones enjoy. The expediency of utilizing all other organized groups in the development of re- spect for scholarship is evident. Fraternities and sororities are especially important since they have j great influence in the formation of campus public opinion. Fellowships in other institutions might well be established by these groups for their mem- bers, as well as by their respective general organi- jzations, the Interfraternity Conference and the Pan- Hellenic League. Alumni committees on scholarship in these house groups charged with the duty of fostering in every possible way intellectual interest and attainment could find methods of giving unusual advantages to their best students. Private donors could do few things better calculated to increase scholarly interest than to endow traveling fellow- ships, a type of privilege which appeals strongly to undergraduates. Honors courses are probably the most effective method yet found of increasing the prestige of schol- arship. These have been tried out in a number of American colleges and seem to be meeting with marked success. President Aydelotte has discussed the whole subject with great thoroughness in an able pamphlet, so that there is little need of going into much detail here. He examines in turn graduation honors conferred for a high general average, those conferred for extra work done in connection with regular courses, and those conferred for satisfactory work in separate honors courses. The last type is the most recently developed and appears to be meeting with the great- est favor among educators. Barnard, Carleton, Co- lumbia, Hobart, Rice Institute, Smith', Swarthmore at once prepare him for honors work and be some indication of his aptitude for it * * * The one almost universal requirement for admission to honors work at present is a creditable record in the courses of the first two years. (usually a B average) * * * In most of the colleges and universities considered * * * students who have been granted permission to read for honors are excused from all the ordinary requirements of class attendance, semester examina- tions, mid-term tests, and the like, and are left In freedom to spend all their time in preparation for the comprehensive examination at the end of the course * * * While honors students are normally excused from the requirements of undergraduate courses they are practically everywhere expected to make use of such courses in preparation for their examination * * * There is nearly everywhere pro- vision for giving them individual supervision and instruction * * * The honors students has his work outlined for him not in terms of what he must do, but in terms of what he must know. Instead of taking courses he takes a subject. He must (with what assistance lhe can get) organize his materials, set his own tasks, find out and strengthen his own weaknesses, develop his own strong points and in general, take the responsibility for his own salva- tion." President Aydelotte believes that .n honors course should not represent too narrow a field, but that frequently a single course should cover the work of several departments. The final compre- hensive examination varies from one institution to another, some being entirely written, some entirely oral, and still other a combination of the two. It seems to be customary for the department giving the course to pass on the fitness of the candidates for admittance in any way it chooses. Various meth- ods are adopted to interest the best students in hon- ors courses, such as having the instructors of fresh- men and sophomores hand to the Director of Hon- or:, Work the mnames of promising meni and women. If psych'ological tests are given at eitrance to col- lege, the tenth of each class receiving the highest ratings may be told that they are expected to make records such as will enable them to take honors courses. The advantage of the honors course from the standpoint of individual development of honors students can hardly be questioned. These men and women are allowed to go ahead at their own pace, are intellectually stimulated by frequent con- ferences with their professors, and are required to gain a thorough mastery of their chosen field. This is the significant statement of two Smith undergrad- uates: "Special Honors is the best thing most of us have discovered at college. The acquisition of learn- ing has departed far from the realm of the painful and has become a stimulating pleasure * * * We often become engaged in rousing discussions' over something we have been reading and our interest in our work has the advantage of not having any classroom to which it could be confined * * * Instead of sitting like a vegetable and being talked at in a class one has the privilege of talking with and coming to know one's faculty. This means inspira- tion." But apart from their happy effect upon the chosen few, honors courses raise scholarship in the eyes of the remaining undergraduates. Individuals who are singled out for special privileges are always looked up to, especially when some high sounding title such as "honors students" is conferred upon them. Even the freedom from course examinations and other routine requirements serves to inspire envy in the "pass" students. President Lowell bears wit- ness to the prestige which honors work gives in these words: "It was encouraging for me the other day to hear that in the present freshman class, out of six hundred and fifty-nine men, two hundred fifty- seven in selecting their main subject announced themselves as candidates for the Degree with Dis- tinction. This is three times as many as have an- nounced themselves for distinction before. And what it means to us is that a degree with distinc- tion is worth having. I think we have, to some ex- tent at least, succeeded in making high scholarship a subject of more admiration and attention." It is not intended to recommend any particular form of honors course in this report, but merely to endorse the principle. Whether an honors course should take all the student's time or only part of it, as in the case of the course being tried in the Eng- lish department this year, whether the course should cover two years or one, whether written or oral comprehensive examinations should be given, wheth- er the honors students should meet their profes- sors in seminars or in private conferences, how broad or how narrow should be the fields covered by honors courses, whether or not theses should be required in addition to the other work, what measures should be taken for the demotion of an honors student who is not doing well to the status of a "pass" student -:ail thrCP am'.ipstionforica~reful faculty discus-