Back in the spring of 1990, I was a young-ish professor, sitting in the convocation ceremony of a wannabe-ivy league college in West Virginia. It was a beautiful place, founded in the 1840s, with classic architecture set in the riotous Appalachian forest. But it struggled to compete for students. Like many small colleges, it admitted a large percentage of “learning disabled” kids from wealthy families – “full pays” of an exorbitant tuition – in order to subsidize smart middle-class kids. That was a win-win all around, because officially “learning disabled” students didn’t count against a college’s standardized testing scores (GRE, LSAT, MCAT, etc.). The one-third or one-quarter of the students who were smart-and-subsidized pushed up the college’s scores, while the dumb-but-wealthy got to purchase a “prestigious” degree.
Colleges are expensive to run, especially given the expectations of wealthy families, so the pursuit of prestige is never-ending. One device in that pursuit is awarding doctoral degrees honoris causa to any random celebrity who can be convinced to attend a convocation and wow the parents. So there I was, sitting in a self-congratulatory convocation ceremony, watching an honorary degree being awarded to “population expert” Paul Ehrlich. It was surreal.
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