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© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 1
Educational Systems and
Institutions
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 2
Education
• Education is defined as the social institution guiding a
society’s transmission of knowledge — to its members.
• Basic facts
• job skills
• Cultural norms and values
• Education is one aspect of the many-sided process of
socialization by which people acquire behaviors essential for
effective participation in society.
• As schools grew larger, they became bureaucratized
• standardized and routinized,
• formal operating and administrative procedures
• Successful schools foster expectations that order will
prevail and that learning is a serious matter.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education in Society
– Number of people age 25 or over with a
high school diploma increased from 41
percent in 1960 to more than 86 percent
in 2006
– Those with a college degree rose from 8
percent in 1960 to about 29 percent in
2006
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 4
Education
• Stages in Education
• Pre-School
• Elementary
• Secondary
• Advanced
• Who chooses schools ?
• At Secondary and lower stages
• Parents are choosing to educate their children in ways
other than in traditional public schools.
• charter schools,
• religious schools,
• nonreligious private schools,
• home schooling.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education
• Beyond Secondary schooling
• College and university student populations are highly
skewed in terms of race, ethnicity, and family income.
• Only 20 percent of the nation’s undergraduates are
young people between 18 and 22 years of age who
are pursuing a parent-financed education.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Homeschooling
• More than 2 million children homeschooled
– Religion still plays role in decision to
homeschool but other reasons play increasing
role
– Critics argue children are isolated from larger
community
– Supporters counter that children do just as well
or better than in public schools
• Rise points to concerns people have about
institutionalized education
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 7
Theoretical interpretations of an
educational system
• Viewed from the functionalist perspective, a specialized
educational agency is needed to transmit knowledge in a
rapidly changing urban and technologically based society.
• Conflict theorists see schools as agencies that reproduce the
current social order, citing credentialism as one factor and
the correspondence principle as another.
• Symbolic interactionists see classrooms as “little worlds”
teeming with behavior.
• Interactionists see American schools primarily benefiting
advantaged youngsters and alienating disadvantaged
youngsters through the hidden curriculum and educational
self-fulfilling prophecies.
8
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 9
• Who Gets to go to school where ?
1. In preindustrial societies, formal schooling is usually
available only to the wealthy.
2. Industrial societies embrace the principle of mass
education, often enacting mandatory education laws, the legal
requirement that children receive a minimum of formal
education.
3. In India, many children work, greatly limiting their
opportunity for schooling. About half of the Indian population
are illiterate
4. Japan’s educational system is widely praised for
producing some of the world’s highest achievers. In Japan,
schooling reflects personal ability more than it does in the
United States, where family income plays a greater part in a
student’s college plans.
Global Variations in Educational Systems
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 10
5. Class differences in Great Britain are more important
in determining access to quality education than they are in
Japan or most other industrial societies.
6. Reflecting the value of equal opportunity, a larger
proportion of Americans attend colleges and universities than
do citizens of any other nation. U.S. education also stresses
practical learning.
Global Variations in Educational Systems
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 11
Functional Analysis of Educational System
• The Functions of Schooling: Structural-functional
analysis looks at how formal education enhances the
operation and stability of society.
• Socialization: teaching skills, values, and norms.
• Cultural innovation through research.
• Social integration: forging a mass of people into a cultural
whole.
• Latent functions of schooling.
• Child care.
• Establishing relationships and networks.
• Critique : The structural-functional approach stresses the ways
in which education supports the operation of an industrial
society, but ignores the persistence of inequality in education.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 12
Conflict Analysis of Educational System
• Social-conflict analysis argues that schools routinely
provide learning according to students’ social
background, thereby perpetuating social inequality.
• Social control. Schools stress compliance and punctuality
through the hidden curriculum, subtle presentations of
political or cultural ideas in the classroom.
• Standardized testing is frequently biased in favor of
affluent white students.
• Tracking is the assignment of students to different types of
educational programs; in practice, it often benefits students
from higher class backgrounds disproportionately.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 13
Education and Inequality
• Schooling and Social Inequality Social-conflict analysis
argues that schools routinely provide learning according to
students’ social background, thereby perpetuating social
inequality.
• Social control. Schools stress compliance and punctuality
through the hidden curriculum, subtle presentations of
political or cultural ideas in the classroom.
• Standardized testing is frequently biased in favor of
affluent white students.
• Tracking is the assignment of students to different types of
educational programs; in practice, it often benefits students
from higher class backgrounds disproportionately.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 14
Education and Inequality
• Inequality among schools:
• Public and private schools. Most private school
students attend church-affiliated schools, especially
Catholic parochial schools. A small number attend elite
preparatory schools. Studies show that private schools
commonly teach more effectively than do public
schools.
• Inequality in public schooling. Most suburban schools
offer better education than most central city schools, a
fact which has led to busing programs. However,
research suggests that increased funding alone will not
be enough to improve students’ academic performance.
• Access to higher education is limited by several factors,
but finances are crucial. People who complete college
on the average earn higher incomes.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education and Inequality
• Significant inequalities exist in
education opportunities available to
different groups
– Wide disparities in funding and facilities
between urban and suburban schools
• The Hidden Curriculum
– Hidden curriculum: standards of behavior
deemed proper by society and that teachers
subtly communicate to students
– Prepares students to submit to authority
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education and Inequality
• Teacher Expectancy
– Teacher-expectancy effect: impact that
teacher expectations about student
performance may have on actual student
achievements
– Student outcomes can become a self-
fulfilling prophecy based on how teachers
perceive students
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education and Inequality
• Bestowal of Status
– Ideally, education selects those with ability
and trains them for skilled positions
– In practice, people are picked based on
social class, race, ethnicity, and gender
– Schools tend to preserve social class
inequalities in each new generation
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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The Influence of Parents’ Education
on Test Performance
Note: Percentage distribution of 12th-grade students across NAEP economics achievement levels,
by highest level of parental education, 2006.
Source: Planty et al. 2008: 25.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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Education and Inequality
• Bestowal of Status
– Schools can reinforce class differences by
putting students in tracks
– Tracking: the practice of placing students in
specific curriculum groups on the basis of
their test scores and other criteria
• Can reinforce disadvantages children from
lower-class families already may face
• Recent research has shown that tracking does
not necessarily identify potential successful
students
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
Companies
20
Education
• With some 15.5 million people enrolled in colleges and
universities, the United States is the world leader in providing
a college education to its people, thus facilitating a path to
better jobs and higher income.
• Since the 1960s, the expansion of state-funded community
colleges has further increased access to higher education.
Community colleges provide a number of specific benefits.
• low tuition
• special importance to minorities
• attract students from around the world
• community college faculty are rewarded for teaching, not research
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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21
Education and Inequality
• Bestowal of Status
– Correspondence principle: schools promote
the values expected of individuals in each
social class and prepare students for the
types of jobs typically held by members of
their class
– Thus they perpetuate social divisions from
one generation to the next
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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22
Education and Inequality
• Credentialism
– Credentialism: an increase in the lowest
level of education required to enter a field
• Gender
– The U.S. educational system has long been
characterized by discriminatory treatment of
women
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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23
Education and Inequality
• Gender
– 20th-century educational sexism included:
• Stereotypes in textbooks
• Pressure on women to study traditional
women’s subjects
• Unequal funding for men’s and women’s
athletic programs
• Employment bias for administrators and
teachers
– Title IX played pivotal role in expanding
access
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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24
The Bureaucratization of Schools
• Schools put into practice Weber’s five
principles of bureaucracy:
– Division of labor
– Hierarchy of authority
– Written rules and regulations
– Impersonality
– Employment based on technical
qualifications
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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25
Teaching as a Profession
• Teachers encounter inherent conflicts of
serving as professionals in a
bureaucracy
• Are pressured from many directions
– Level of required schooling is high
– Salaries are low
– Prestige has declined
• Teacher turnover is significant
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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26
Average Salaries for
Teachers, 2007
Source: American Federation of Teachers 2007.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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27
Teacher Turnover, 2003–2004
Note: Percentage of public K–12
teachers who did not teach in the same
school the following year, by poverty
level of school and the reason teachers left.
Source: Planty et al. 2008: 51.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
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28
Student Subcultures
• Are complex and diverse
• Some students get left out
• Four distinctive subcultures among
college students:
– Collegiate
– Academic
– Vocational
– Nonconformist
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
Companies
29
Public High School Graduates
by Race and Ethnicity, 2019 (projected)
Note: Percentages do not add
to 100 due to rounding error.
Source: Western Interstate
Commission for Higher
Education 2008.
© Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill
Companies
30
Education
• Credentialism, evaluating a person on the basis of educational
degrees, is increasingly common in modern societies.
• Schooling transforms social privilege into personal merit.
• Critique The social-conflict paradigm links education with
social inequality, but it minimizes the extent to which
education has provided the opportunity for upward mobility.
• Problems In the Schools.
• Discipline and violence. Almost everyone agrees that
schools should teach personal discipline, but few think schools
are succeeding.
• Is this a form of socialization that OUGHT to be the
responsibility of schools?
• Student passivity is promoted in five ways in large
bureaucratic school systems.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 31
Education
• Theodore Sizer identified five ways in which large,
bureaucratic schools undermine education:
• Rigid uniformity.
• Numerical ratings.
• Rigid expectations.
• Specialization.
• Little individual responsibility.
• College: the silent classroom. Passivity is common in colleges
and universities. The only voice heard is usually the teacher’s.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 32
Education
• The dropout rate has declined slightly in recent decades; currently about 11
percent of people between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four have
dropped out of school.
• Academic standards. According to A Nation At Risk, the quality of U.S.
education has declined sharply and functional illiteracy, reading and
writing skills insufficient for everyday life, is widespread.
• In recent decades, there has been a substantial amount of grade inflation, by
which teachers give higher and higher grades for average work.
• Recent Issues in U.S. Education.
• School choice proponents advocate such developments as magnet
schools,
• schooling for profit, and charter schools.
• Home schooling is gaining popularity across the United States, but it has its
critics as well as its supporters.
• Schooling people with disabilities often involves mainstreaming, or
integrating special students into the overall educational program.
© Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 33
Education
• Adult education. The share of U.S. students aged twenty-five
and older has risen sharply in recent years and now accounts
for 43 percent of people in the classroom.
• Low salaries, frustration, and retirement, as well as rising enrollment
and reductions in class size, have combined to create teaching
vacancies.
• Looking Ahead: Schooling in the Twenty-first century.
• Computers and other new types of information technology will
continue to be important
• Technology cannot solve all of our educational problems.
• Twenty-first Century Campus: Where are the Men? In 2000, men
accounted for only 44 percent of all United States undergraduates.

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201.18 educational systems and institutions

  • 1. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 1 Educational Systems and Institutions
  • 2. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 2 Education • Education is defined as the social institution guiding a society’s transmission of knowledge — to its members. • Basic facts • job skills • Cultural norms and values • Education is one aspect of the many-sided process of socialization by which people acquire behaviors essential for effective participation in society. • As schools grew larger, they became bureaucratized • standardized and routinized, • formal operating and administrative procedures • Successful schools foster expectations that order will prevail and that learning is a serious matter.
  • 3. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 3 Education in Society – Number of people age 25 or over with a high school diploma increased from 41 percent in 1960 to more than 86 percent in 2006 – Those with a college degree rose from 8 percent in 1960 to about 29 percent in 2006
  • 4. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 4 Education • Stages in Education • Pre-School • Elementary • Secondary • Advanced • Who chooses schools ? • At Secondary and lower stages • Parents are choosing to educate their children in ways other than in traditional public schools. • charter schools, • religious schools, • nonreligious private schools, • home schooling.
  • 5. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 5 Education • Beyond Secondary schooling • College and university student populations are highly skewed in terms of race, ethnicity, and family income. • Only 20 percent of the nation’s undergraduates are young people between 18 and 22 years of age who are pursuing a parent-financed education.
  • 6. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 6 Homeschooling • More than 2 million children homeschooled – Religion still plays role in decision to homeschool but other reasons play increasing role – Critics argue children are isolated from larger community – Supporters counter that children do just as well or better than in public schools • Rise points to concerns people have about institutionalized education
  • 7. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 7 Theoretical interpretations of an educational system • Viewed from the functionalist perspective, a specialized educational agency is needed to transmit knowledge in a rapidly changing urban and technologically based society. • Conflict theorists see schools as agencies that reproduce the current social order, citing credentialism as one factor and the correspondence principle as another. • Symbolic interactionists see classrooms as “little worlds” teeming with behavior. • Interactionists see American schools primarily benefiting advantaged youngsters and alienating disadvantaged youngsters through the hidden curriculum and educational self-fulfilling prophecies.
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  • 9. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 9 • Who Gets to go to school where ? 1. In preindustrial societies, formal schooling is usually available only to the wealthy. 2. Industrial societies embrace the principle of mass education, often enacting mandatory education laws, the legal requirement that children receive a minimum of formal education. 3. In India, many children work, greatly limiting their opportunity for schooling. About half of the Indian population are illiterate 4. Japan’s educational system is widely praised for producing some of the world’s highest achievers. In Japan, schooling reflects personal ability more than it does in the United States, where family income plays a greater part in a student’s college plans. Global Variations in Educational Systems
  • 10. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 10 5. Class differences in Great Britain are more important in determining access to quality education than they are in Japan or most other industrial societies. 6. Reflecting the value of equal opportunity, a larger proportion of Americans attend colleges and universities than do citizens of any other nation. U.S. education also stresses practical learning. Global Variations in Educational Systems
  • 11. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 11 Functional Analysis of Educational System • The Functions of Schooling: Structural-functional analysis looks at how formal education enhances the operation and stability of society. • Socialization: teaching skills, values, and norms. • Cultural innovation through research. • Social integration: forging a mass of people into a cultural whole. • Latent functions of schooling. • Child care. • Establishing relationships and networks. • Critique : The structural-functional approach stresses the ways in which education supports the operation of an industrial society, but ignores the persistence of inequality in education.
  • 12. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 12 Conflict Analysis of Educational System • Social-conflict analysis argues that schools routinely provide learning according to students’ social background, thereby perpetuating social inequality. • Social control. Schools stress compliance and punctuality through the hidden curriculum, subtle presentations of political or cultural ideas in the classroom. • Standardized testing is frequently biased in favor of affluent white students. • Tracking is the assignment of students to different types of educational programs; in practice, it often benefits students from higher class backgrounds disproportionately.
  • 13. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 13 Education and Inequality • Schooling and Social Inequality Social-conflict analysis argues that schools routinely provide learning according to students’ social background, thereby perpetuating social inequality. • Social control. Schools stress compliance and punctuality through the hidden curriculum, subtle presentations of political or cultural ideas in the classroom. • Standardized testing is frequently biased in favor of affluent white students. • Tracking is the assignment of students to different types of educational programs; in practice, it often benefits students from higher class backgrounds disproportionately.
  • 14. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 14 Education and Inequality • Inequality among schools: • Public and private schools. Most private school students attend church-affiliated schools, especially Catholic parochial schools. A small number attend elite preparatory schools. Studies show that private schools commonly teach more effectively than do public schools. • Inequality in public schooling. Most suburban schools offer better education than most central city schools, a fact which has led to busing programs. However, research suggests that increased funding alone will not be enough to improve students’ academic performance. • Access to higher education is limited by several factors, but finances are crucial. People who complete college on the average earn higher incomes.
  • 15. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 15 Education and Inequality • Significant inequalities exist in education opportunities available to different groups – Wide disparities in funding and facilities between urban and suburban schools • The Hidden Curriculum – Hidden curriculum: standards of behavior deemed proper by society and that teachers subtly communicate to students – Prepares students to submit to authority
  • 16. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 16 Education and Inequality • Teacher Expectancy – Teacher-expectancy effect: impact that teacher expectations about student performance may have on actual student achievements – Student outcomes can become a self- fulfilling prophecy based on how teachers perceive students
  • 17. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 17 Education and Inequality • Bestowal of Status – Ideally, education selects those with ability and trains them for skilled positions – In practice, people are picked based on social class, race, ethnicity, and gender – Schools tend to preserve social class inequalities in each new generation
  • 18. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 18 The Influence of Parents’ Education on Test Performance Note: Percentage distribution of 12th-grade students across NAEP economics achievement levels, by highest level of parental education, 2006. Source: Planty et al. 2008: 25.
  • 19. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 19 Education and Inequality • Bestowal of Status – Schools can reinforce class differences by putting students in tracks – Tracking: the practice of placing students in specific curriculum groups on the basis of their test scores and other criteria • Can reinforce disadvantages children from lower-class families already may face • Recent research has shown that tracking does not necessarily identify potential successful students
  • 20. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 20 Education • With some 15.5 million people enrolled in colleges and universities, the United States is the world leader in providing a college education to its people, thus facilitating a path to better jobs and higher income. • Since the 1960s, the expansion of state-funded community colleges has further increased access to higher education. Community colleges provide a number of specific benefits. • low tuition • special importance to minorities • attract students from around the world • community college faculty are rewarded for teaching, not research
  • 21. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 21 Education and Inequality • Bestowal of Status – Correspondence principle: schools promote the values expected of individuals in each social class and prepare students for the types of jobs typically held by members of their class – Thus they perpetuate social divisions from one generation to the next
  • 22. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 22 Education and Inequality • Credentialism – Credentialism: an increase in the lowest level of education required to enter a field • Gender – The U.S. educational system has long been characterized by discriminatory treatment of women
  • 23. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 23 Education and Inequality • Gender – 20th-century educational sexism included: • Stereotypes in textbooks • Pressure on women to study traditional women’s subjects • Unequal funding for men’s and women’s athletic programs • Employment bias for administrators and teachers – Title IX played pivotal role in expanding access
  • 24. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 24 The Bureaucratization of Schools • Schools put into practice Weber’s five principles of bureaucracy: – Division of labor – Hierarchy of authority – Written rules and regulations – Impersonality – Employment based on technical qualifications
  • 25. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 25 Teaching as a Profession • Teachers encounter inherent conflicts of serving as professionals in a bureaucracy • Are pressured from many directions – Level of required schooling is high – Salaries are low – Prestige has declined • Teacher turnover is significant
  • 26. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 26 Average Salaries for Teachers, 2007 Source: American Federation of Teachers 2007.
  • 27. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 27 Teacher Turnover, 2003–2004 Note: Percentage of public K–12 teachers who did not teach in the same school the following year, by poverty level of school and the reason teachers left. Source: Planty et al. 2008: 51.
  • 28. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 28 Student Subcultures • Are complex and diverse • Some students get left out • Four distinctive subcultures among college students: – Collegiate – Academic – Vocational – Nonconformist
  • 29. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 29 Public High School Graduates by Race and Ethnicity, 2019 (projected) Note: Percentages do not add to 100 due to rounding error. Source: Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education 2008.
  • 30. © Copyright 2009 McGraw Hill Companies 30 Education • Credentialism, evaluating a person on the basis of educational degrees, is increasingly common in modern societies. • Schooling transforms social privilege into personal merit. • Critique The social-conflict paradigm links education with social inequality, but it minimizes the extent to which education has provided the opportunity for upward mobility. • Problems In the Schools. • Discipline and violence. Almost everyone agrees that schools should teach personal discipline, but few think schools are succeeding. • Is this a form of socialization that OUGHT to be the responsibility of schools? • Student passivity is promoted in five ways in large bureaucratic school systems.
  • 31. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 31 Education • Theodore Sizer identified five ways in which large, bureaucratic schools undermine education: • Rigid uniformity. • Numerical ratings. • Rigid expectations. • Specialization. • Little individual responsibility. • College: the silent classroom. Passivity is common in colleges and universities. The only voice heard is usually the teacher’s.
  • 32. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 32 Education • The dropout rate has declined slightly in recent decades; currently about 11 percent of people between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four have dropped out of school. • Academic standards. According to A Nation At Risk, the quality of U.S. education has declined sharply and functional illiteracy, reading and writing skills insufficient for everyday life, is widespread. • In recent decades, there has been a substantial amount of grade inflation, by which teachers give higher and higher grades for average work. • Recent Issues in U.S. Education. • School choice proponents advocate such developments as magnet schools, • schooling for profit, and charter schools. • Home schooling is gaining popularity across the United States, but it has its critics as well as its supporters. • Schooling people with disabilities often involves mainstreaming, or integrating special students into the overall educational program.
  • 33. © Copyright 2009 Alan S. Berger 33 Education • Adult education. The share of U.S. students aged twenty-five and older has risen sharply in recent years and now accounts for 43 percent of people in the classroom. • Low salaries, frustration, and retirement, as well as rising enrollment and reductions in class size, have combined to create teaching vacancies. • Looking Ahead: Schooling in the Twenty-first century. • Computers and other new types of information technology will continue to be important • Technology cannot solve all of our educational problems. • Twenty-first Century Campus: Where are the Men? In 2000, men accounted for only 44 percent of all United States undergraduates.