PE RSPECTIVES Page Nine STATE EDUCATION ... Eugene B. Elliott Ens OR'S NOTE: Eugene B. Elliott is the Superintendent of Public Instruction n the State of Michigan. College enrollment figures for Michi- gan will climb to new heights by 1960 although it is believed that by that time the unusual enrollments caused by the avalanche of returning veterans will have' passed. Conservative data for Michigan indicate that by the end of the next decade no fewer than 120,000 students will be in attendance at our 011 es. Today there are fewer than 90;000. It is thought that the potential peak enrollment for returning veterans will be 1950-51 when an all-time high of 210,000 students may go to college. This peak enrollment can only be taken care of if the colleges have plant facilities to meet adequately the anticipated stu- dent load of 1960. It is possible that many veterans will not care to subject themselves . and their families to the great inconveniences and hardships which may prevail and the actual num- ber may fall far short of the possible peak. During the last four years the state has appropriated $22,912,000 to provide buildings on the campuses of the public colleges and universities. An addition- al sum of $2,750,000 was appropriated for building repairs and the elimination of fire hazards. While the sum total appears large, it must be remembered that the state has spent but little on college buildings during the last two decades. There follows a breakdown of the building appropriations: Building Appropriations 1942-46 University of Michigan..$8,000,000 Michigan State College.. 7,000,000 Central Michigan College of Education ....... 1,105,000 Northern Michigan College of Education ....... 950;000 Western Michigan College of Education ....... 1,305,000. Mich. State Normal Col.. 1,205,000 Michigan College of Mining and Technology 1,047,000 Wayne University ...... 2,700,000 TOTAL .. . ........ $22,912,000 Since 1925 college enrollments have increased from 23,000 to 83,000, a gain of, 260%. Many college buildings con- structed during the last quarter of the nineteenth century or before have be- come obsolete, unsafe, and very expen- sive, to maintain. The story is not complete without adding that building costs today are almost exactly two times the cost of buildings constructed prior to the war. Adequate building accommodation is not the only problem foreseen in the rising enrollments. A more important problem Will be to secure a staff, suf- ficiently trained in research techniques and possessing experience both in teach- ing and the practical applications. Busi- ness and industry are calling for trained personnel to meet the many techno- logical and complex problems of our modern economy. If the colleges must put up with second or third rate teach- ers because business and industry can out-bid them, we are heading for very unsatisfactory college instruction. The principal function of a college is the instruction of students. No other consideration must supercede the edu- cational aspects. Administrative staff, buildings, finance, and public relations must never become ends in themselves. They are supported and maintained solely to improve instructional process- es. While it is important that practical considerations of living be considered in close relation to the instructional pro- gram there are dangers that students may become only trained rather than educated. he college instructional staff must be selected with the utmost care to insure a sound educational program. More generous grants to public edu- cation on the elementary and secondary level will further complicate the prob- lem of securing teachers in many col- leges. Some of the larger school systems are already attracting persons with doctor's degrees for administrative and key instructional positions. Lack of housing in the rapidly grow- ing college communities has further complicated the task of securing per- sonnel. Some ccileges have partly solved the difficulty by erecting housing which may be rented by, staff members. The shortage of well trained person- nel has forced some institutions to use makeshift devices in order to maintain student work standards. Department heads or a group of experienced teach- ers make up the examinations for class- es taught by inexperienced and less well trained teachers. Demonstration as energetically as though they had playgrounds well equipped with swings and slides. Colleges everywhere can materially aid the government in performing its tasks if given sufficient funds for re- search and consultative services. The demanding urgencies of governmental administration leave little time for delving into facts to extract therefrom basic and fundamental principles of action. Rather administration develops, a natural desire for maintaining a status-quo unless machinery is devel- oped which stimulates creative action. The use of the services of expert college personnel to assist in conducting con- tinuous and objective research in co- operation with governmental officials would provide the people with govern- ment more closely related to their needs. The very ccmplexity of modern living has tended to open a wide gap The Ageing The child rises early; Sleep is a moment between night and day. Waking he sees and runs to see. All things that he touches have not been touched before; The tree will not thwart his determined climb, The water falls back before his eager arms, Small bodies like his own may give under his pounding fists. Knowing no denial how can he know hope? I have seen too many unresilient days, Too many Gods that fell before an angry phrase, an action too unpatterned To meet the morning without hope and fear of resolutions. -Donald La Badic ments to more selected individuals. The high school mark gained while pursuing a high school program mainly dominated by colege influences has, therefore, been the major criterion for college admission. Several evaluative studies, the needs of community high schools, and the varied educational pat- terns of returning veterans are forcing a reconsideration of the traditional re- quirements. Many realize that the ability to secure desired grades in the second- ary schools may cist quite apart from emotional stability and social under- standing. Ccllsge drop-outswhich av- erage s muchas from 35 to 40 per cent of the total enrollment indicate that a new basis of admssion ss needed. The development of the community college often spoklen of as the thirteenth and fourteenth grades will bring re- newed interest in college admission practices. These community colleges, like the public secondary school, will be supported by the local communities and will in many instances prepare students for their vocational interests. Most of their gr.duates will have:taken terminal courses. Many will want to continue in college. It would be un- fortunate for the proper development of the community college if it were domin- ated by the four-year college to such an extent that only those taking the tra- ditional college courses would be re- cognized as having acceptable academ- ic standing. It seems entirely logical that college entrance requirements should take into consideration the emotional stability and the social understanding of pro- spective students, as well as their ability to think, as demonstrated by whatever work has been pursued. A committee has been organized by the Michigan colleges and secondary schools for the purpose of studying evi- dence relative to the admission require- ments and to make recommendations. In the meantime students from the bet- ter secondary schools are to be admitted without the usual course patterns pro- vided they demonstrate their ability to do college work. It is expected that the study will last for at least eight years or for such time as will allow at least one class to complete a full cycle of the secondary school and the college study. The solution to many of the problems which have been discussed will mater- ialize over a period of many years, Many of the solutions may be developed only through help from the people of the state as they act through their leg, islative bodies. The Michigan legislature has already felt its responsibility and has created a committee to bring recommendations back to the present legislative session, The interim committee made three m- portant studies. One deals with the origin of resident students attending both the public and private colleges and universities. A second is concerned with the estimated future enrollments of higher education. The third examines the evidence for the establishment of community colleges at the thirteenth and fourteenth grade level: The joint legislative committee asked for an ad- visory committee to be appointed by the governing boards of the public col- leges and junior colleges.. This advisory committee recommends that the legis- lative committee ask for an appropria- tion to finance a comprehensive study of higher education sin the state. Such a study is greatly needed and would facilitate the constitutional mandate that the legislature provide for the ed- ucation of youth. , Rwould enable the legislature to plan adequately for the future program of higher education whether it be for the extension of col- lege facilities, housog, improved staffs or the encoucagement of better ser- vices to the Dubc. has to be resorted to frequently because of deficiencies of laboratory equipment and space. The student suffers because he can see only how it is done and does not have the experience of actually doing. A large percentage of the veterans are married. In some institutions nearly half are married and it is unusual when less than a third maintain homes. Many had children when they began their college work and additional children are being born. Colleges have had thrust on them the responsibility of caring for these families to a greater or less de- gree. The degree seems to be in keep- ing with the sense of responsibility felt by the college administration and the seriousness of the problem. Some insti- tutions are finding it difficult to find school facilities for the growing child- ren. Others have met real problems in providing for health and medical needs of the families of veterans. Extensive housing developments on college campuses have brought needs for recreation opportunities suitable for children as well as adults. Especially needed are play oreas for children. The hurried development of temporary housing projects has allowed little time for proper planning. In many instances the veterans are living in a college slum. Their lives are dominated by regimen- tation and lack of conveniences. Even the purchasing of household supplies is a major achievement. Few have cars and often it is a long trip to the nearest market. No one wants these conditions to exist any longer than is necessary. The veterans, to be sure, are taking it in stride. Young mothers walk long dis- tances uncomplainingly to buy food; and their children, play in dusty streets between the technical operation of gov- ernment on the part of the people. The channels of popular expression must be maintained to give opportunity for the establishment of sound policies of po- litical thought and action. The protec- tion of our form of government means increasing reliance upon the services of experts and less faith in the emotional solution of technical governmental problems. The people must come to have a greater appreciation of the value of higher education in the lives of the cit- izens. In earlier days when few went to college and when a college education centered about the training of teachers, lawyers, doctors, and preachers, it was easy for the average citizen to compre- hend the value of trained people in his own everyday living. He could easily ob- serve that the trained medical man was superior to the vitch doctor and that the village school teacher who read the. overseas letters from relatives or com- puted- his mathematical problems had knowledge which was useful in the daily economy. Now, when more go to col- leges and when the average citizen makes fewer demands upon them, the popular appreciation of the worth of. the college must rest not so much on personal advantage as on the social regenerative function of higher educa- tion. One final problem facing public higher education is that of limiting the admis- sion of students to those who will most probably succeed. As enrollments in- crease and resources became more diffi- cult to obtain, the colleges will be more and more selective in their entrance re- quirements. Even now many of the church-related and private colleges in the state are limiting their enroll-