dearth of
MALES ON CAMPUS
by
ROBERT WEISSBERG
_______________________________________________________________
Robert
Weissberg
is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at The University
of Illinois-Urbana and occasionally teaches in the NYU Politics
Department MA Program. He is the author of many books including
Bad Students, Not Bad Schools (2010).
Soviet
ideologues were famous for adjusting Marxism to the zigs and
zags of history, but they were pikers compared to today's campus
affirmative-action apparatchiks. The latest installment from
university diversicrats is -- ready for this -- affirmative
action for men, not black or Hispanic men, but white men.
More
is involved than the usual fairness via biological quota. The
financial stakes are huge. Compared to women, white men disproportionally
gravitate to wealth-generating fields -- business, engineering
and the sciences. This predilection will be no small matter
in a few decades, and universities are justifiably nervous as
the pool of future rich donors shrinks vis-à-vis those
who majored in French literature.
What
explains this male flight? Let me speculate a bit and offer
a reason that dare not speak its name in today's PC climate:
universities are increasingly becoming feminized and many men,
to use the anti-discrimination vocabulary, loathe a hostile
working environment. In a word, males increasingly feel emasculated
in today's universities. Yes, being outnumbered by women may
fuel certain male adolescent fantasies, but believe it or not,
a young male who visits a school dominated by women will suddenly
have second thoughts about predatory opportunities.
Feminization
is most apparent in how schools now combat boyish behaviour.
The movie Animal House depicts this behaviour perfectly
--drunken frat parties, stupid pranks, clumsy intoxicated sexual
aggression, coarse scatological language and countless other
crude behaviours celebrating adolescent masculinity. It is not
that these behaviours are condemned (and we can all agree that
extreme versions deserve punishment). Rather, it is the form
of the punishment that is anti-male. Miscreants are often social-worked,
and for many young males, therapeutic punishment, complete with
public confessions of dubious offenses, is a near-death experience.
Imagine Bluto (the Animal House hero who famously said,
"Grab a brew. Don't cost nothing") suffering the obligatory
freshperson lectures given by a feminist counselor on non-alcoholic
alternatives to beer and on the need for informed consent in
all "intimate encounters, including same-sex ones."
Not even the mighty Bluto could survive being told that his
manliness is merely socially constructed.
SUPPORT
SERVICES FOR HETERO MALES?
Antagonism
toward fraternities is the most visible outcropping of campus
feminization. Recall the disastrous faculty-led imbroglio over
the Duke Lacrosse team. What happened at Duke could probably
happen almost anywhere given today's faculty.
Further,
add the abolition of male-dominated sports such as wrestling,
while adding women's teams, regardless of demand, in sports
like rowing, to satisfy Title IX requirements. And don't forget
all the attention lavished on Women Studies Programs, everything
from academic majors to expensive conferences and hefty speaker
fees. And where are the support services for heterosexual males?
Try putting Playboy in a college bookstore or decorating
a dorm room with female pin-ups. These problems are almost inconceivable
if the magazines in question were Out or the Advocate,
two leading male homosexual magazines. Indeed, a student --
let alone a Christian group -- protesting gay magazines and
homoerotic pin-ups would certainly risk being disciplined for
impermissible hostility (and those complaining about Playboy
may even benefit from this socially sanctioned outrage).
Underlying
this public emasculation is a deeper, less visible faculty-led
war on maleness that is currently concentrated in the humanities
and social sciences but may well spread into the hard disciplines.
(For the record, feminine and masculine here do not exactly
correspond to biology. This is about psychology not anatomy.
I know male female academics that drive their female colleagues
crazy with their male mentality).
This
difference is about how to find truth. For males (and again
keep in mind the non-overlap with biology), truth is discovered
as follows. First, it is axiomatic that a single objective truth
exists and this drives inquiry. Second, social niceties are
subordinated to truth-seeking and uncivil, upsetting behaviours
like sarcasm are therefore tolerable. Emotional feelings about
what is right or wrong are irrelevant. Thomas Sowell once told
me that he would never return to the classroom since he did
not want to hear, "I feel . . . " Indeed, many males
relish the verbal jousting and put-downs and these do not undermine
personal friendship. Third, not all views are worth hearing
and those wasting time will be forcefully and brusquely cut-off.
Those able to marshal hard evidence prevail. In a nutshell,
male truth-seeking is authoritarian.
By
contrast, the feminine approach will stress social etiquette
-- woe to those who interrupts the speaker with, "there's
no hard evidence for that, so let's move on." And unlike
a male-dominated discussion, everyone, regardless of background
and expertise, is permitted to share their views and then is
thanked for sharing. Consensus-building is central and those
rejecting harmony will be castigated as disruptive. Personal
relationship often shape discussions -- one never disputes friends
even if one sharply disagrees and being attacked, no matter
how mild, can destroy a friendship. Needless to say, everybody
taking a turn to speak can make for long, rambling meetings.
NO
EYEBALL-ROLLING, NICENESS COUNTS
To
make this concrete, consider a stereotypical male (a nerdy John)
in a small liberal arts college enrolled in Economics 101 whose
instructor (a knowledge facilitator, not a sage on stage) embodies
the feminine approach. John wants to learn economics to become
rich. The class begins with the instructor explaining that contemporary
statistics-heavy economics is only one way of knowing, and this
class will focus on alternatives to conventional knowledge.
Moreover, there will be group projects to discover ways of making
society more just by equalizing wealth and the group project
will count for 50% of the final grade. The first two class periods
are spent asking each student to explain what he or she hopes
to learn plus their opinions on economic inequality. Nobody
is criticized or told to stop talking, regardless of factual
errors.
Matters
go badly for John. The instructor repeatedly chides him for
belittling the ideas of others by rolling his eyes and making
facial expressions of disbelief. His insistence on finding a
single best possible solution to an economic problem becomes
repetitive to the point where the instructor suggests that he
seek help at the school's counseling center to manage his anger.
John's recourse to statistical data is interpreted as just showing
off. By the third week is he no longer blurting out "What
about trade-offs and opportunity costs?," since nobody
pays attention. He discovers that the Internet offers multiple
sites explaining economics, he finds a nerdy on-line discussion
group, stops attending class and eventually drops out.
Thanks
to his Internet contacts, John joins a small start-up and three
years later patents a program to detect lying on the Web. It
is widely licensed and John is an instant multi-millionaire.
Though rich as Croesus he never sends a nickel to his alma mater.
This
depiction is, of course, an exaggeration but not by much. And
this anti-male atmosphere will probably escalate as fewer and
fewer males even apply. Meanwhile, those males who do attend
and graduate will probably be ghettoized in such traditionally
male fields as business, engineering and the sciences (and one
wonders how long these majors will survive outside of major
universities).
Reversing
this pattern, assuming that gender equality is a problem requiring
a solution, will be exceedingly difficult. The traditional affirmative
solution of lower admission standards to achieve diversity is
politically risky. What judge will rule that today's complex
diverse world economy requires students to learn how to interact
with white males?
It
is equally hard to imagine universities attracting more white
males by making the campus more white-male friendly. Will deans
subsidize a fraternity as a ‘while-male theme house’
or sponsor beer-blast toga parties to achieve a critical mass
of white males to lessen their social isolation? (But Brandeis
did make a faint attempt to attract more males: it gave free
baseball caps to the first 500 males who applied).
Make
no mistake -- the numbers are indisputable but the source of
the problem is unspeakable. No university wants to admit that
sex differences are real and often intractable. Men and women
are not interchangeable and as many (but not all) women feel
uncomfortable in an uber-macho setting, many males (but not
all) similarly reject an environment dominated by female values.