Report of the Committee on Trust in Higher Education
Produced by a ten-member committee of Yale faculty co-chaired by sociologist Julia Adams and historian Beverly Gage, this report examines why public confidence in higher education has fallen so sharply and what Yale can do to rebuild it. Drawing on a year of listening sessions, interviews with critics and supporters across the political spectrum, and a review of more than 300 sources, the committee traces declining trust to three visible pressures — the soaring cost and uncertain value of a degree, an opaque admissions process, and contested questions of free speech, political bias, and self-censorship — compounded by internal strains like grade inflation and administrative growth. It argues that universities have eroded trust by trying to be all things to all people, and calls on Yale to recommit to its core mission of creating, disseminating, and preserving knowledge through research and teaching. The report closes with twenty concrete recommendations, spanning affordability, admissions reform, academic freedom, intellectual pluralism, classroom rigor, and collaborative governance.
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