| John Leo |
| John Leo is a Senior Fellow at the Center for the American University and a contributing editor at the Institute's City Journal. Mr. Leo's areas of interest include free speech, popular culture, higher education, and civil society. |
| James Piereson |
| James Piereson is a Senior Fellow
and Director of Manhattan Institute's Center for the American University
and president of the William E. Simon Foundation. Mr. Piereson's research
focuses on the importance of the classical liberal education and intellectual pluralism. |
Higher Education
|
| David
DesRosiers |
| David DesRosiers is Executive
Director, VERITAS Fund for Higher Education Reform. |
|
Media
Inquiries:
212.599.7000
Bridget Sweeney |
|
CAU Events
In 2007, the Center for the American University hosted seven public events.
Our main event was a conference marking the 20th anniversary of Allan
Bloom's seminal book, The Closing of the American Mind, which lamented
the decline of scholarly rigor and free inquiry in universities. The conference
featured scholars such as Peter Berkowitz, Mark Steyn, Robert George,
and the Manhattan Institute's Jim Piereson and Heather Mac Donald. [Watch
video].
Other CAU events in 2007 addressed the pressing problem of today's universities
by featuring speakers from all segments of the academy, such as:
John Tomasi, director, Political Theory Project, Brown University.
Professor Tomasi's luncheon speech provided a firsthand account of how
the Political Theory Project is reshaping Brown's culture and inspiring
students to consider ideas that are currently lacking in academia.
Martin Kramer, Wexler Fromer Fellow, Washington Institute for
Near East Policy and Senior Fellow, Olin Institute, Harvard University.
Mr. Kramer exposed the hollow research and questionable allegiances of
many Middle Eastern studies programs.
Hank Brown, president, University of Colorado and former U.S.
senator. Brown described how he successfully enacted substantial reforms
at UC, while at the same time elevating the intellectual conversation
on campus.
2008 Events
February 6th, 2008
Dr. Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University. President
Crow's talk, "The Death of the Public University and Why it is Time
for a New Model," presents his vision of the "public university."
For over 200 years, public universities have been the facilitators of
the American dream, opening the doors of economic opportunity and advancement.
Today, that historic role is threatened. Dr. Crow discussed what this
means for America's future, as countries like India and China, recognizing
the importance of a highly educated workforce, outstrip our ability to
produce workers qualified for a global, knowledge-based economy.
David Ignatius of the Washington Post described President Crow
thusly: "Listening to the parade of the presidential candidates repeating
bromides about how to fix what's broken in America, I wish I could charter
a bus and bring them all here to meet the man who is actually fixing thingsMichael
Crow, the iconoclastic president of the Arizona State University."
April 7th, 2008
The CAU was pleased to host acclaimed author, columnist, and former professor
of classics, Victor Davis Hanson, who spoke about what's gone wrong with
American higher education and how to improve it. According to Professor
Hanson, much of the contemporary failure of the universitythe rise
of a therapeutic mindset, the spread of vocationalism, the ubiquity of
political correctness, and the intrusion of popular culture into the curriculumcan
be understood as a rejection of both traditional classical education and
the values of the Greeks.
April 14th, 2008
The CAU and the Moving Picture Institute hosted the New York premiere
of the documentary Indoctrinate U. Directed by Evan Coyne Maloney,
Indoctrinate U exposes the stunning intolerance, rampant viewpoint
discrimination, and broad disrespect for free inquiry on college and university
campuses across the nation. The film has been praised as a hard-hitting
investigation into the true nature of modern higher education.
MindingTheCampus.com editor
John Leo joined CAU senior fellow David DesRosiers in a discussion after
the film.
May 29th, 2008
The CAU welcomes author and Yale Law School professor Anthony T. Kronman,
author of Education's End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given
Up on the Meaning of Life. Kronman's book contrasts an earlier era
in American education, when the question of the meaning of life was at
the center of instruction, with our own time, when college and university
teachers have largely abandoned this question. In particular, teachers
of the humanitieswho once felt a special responsibility to guide their
students in exploring the great questions of livinghave lost confidence
in their authority to do so.
|
|
"We
are not trying to topple the status quo and replace it with a 'Right
University'. Intellectual pluralism is the centerpiece of this campaign,
and that is a goal that thoughtful liberals and conservatives can
all support."
David
DesRosiers, Executive Director, VERITAS Fund for Higher
Education Reform
|
|
|
"As
an alumnus of Princeton’s James Madison Program, I saw firsthand
how one program can bring the fruits of intellectual pluralism to
campus."
Pete
Hegseth,
Princeton Alumnus
|
|