What’s the Purpose of College?
As a college teacher, if I don’t understand the needs and desires of my customers, I can’t properly uphold my end of the bargain. Giving customers what they expect is a matter of professional integrity. And according to a recent conversation (thanks, Ed Gonzalez), I may not understand those expectations as well as I thought. So, dear college student–past, present or future–answer this short essay quiz to help me a) better serve my students and b) decide whether I need to more aggressively pursue critical thinking seminars/authorship/tutoring/the circus/etc.

Never mind that Ferris Bueler was in high school...
- First, what’s the purpose of going to college, primarily? Is it to get a degree so you’ll be more marketable? To impress friends/potential mates or appease family? Or is it to enrich your mind, learn things you wouldn’t otherwise know, develop your ability to think for yourself? Is it about jumping through hoops to get that job so you can buy cooler toys, or is it about transforming your identity–becoming genuinely wiser?
- Second, what’s a college teacher’s job? To convey information, enlighten, help students understand? Or is it to present and assess–to say “here’s some info” or a concept or a way of thinking, and then to quantify how well you pick it up with grades–grades eventually used to determine who gets what job, into which graduate program, into which law school, etc? Is the professor’s job to bring the slower students up to speed or to filter them out? If you’re not sure, ask yourself this: do you prefer a professor who assigns an easy A, but teaches you nothing, or a professor who blows your mind, but gives you a C+? The professor who makes the hoop big enough and low enough to walk through, or the professor who rejects hoops outright?
- And last, is operating in a certification-based environment necessarily hostile to teachers who relish sharing their passion, but loathe assigning grades–who see grades only as a superficial motivator, and more of a barrier to true learning than anything? Do teachers who love their discipline necessarily dirty it with bureaucratic quantifications? Or can really good teachers use grades to their advantage while maintaining their integrity, as well as trust with their students?
Don’t worry–whether you want them or not, no grades will be assigned. Anonymous posts welcome, lest somebody is worried their professor will find out what they really think…