That faculties are liberal is beyond dispute. In a rigorous survey, University of British Columbia sociology Prof. Neil Gross concluded, "professors currently compose the most liberal major occupational group in American society."..Postulated reasons for these findings are discussed at the link.
Gross and Solon Simmons of George Mason University surveyed more than 1,400 full-time professors at more than 900 American institutions. Only 19.7 percent of professors identified themselves as "any shade of conservative" (compared with 31.9 percent of the general population), while 62.2 percent identified themselves as some flavor of liberal (compared with 23.3 percent of Americans overall).
Gross found variation between disciplines. Social sciences and humanities contained the highest concentration of liberals. Conservatives were as numerous as liberals in business, health sciences, computer science and engineering.
29 January 2012
Why do university faculty "lean to the left" ?
Excerpts from an op-ed piece in the StarTribune:
Hasn't this been discussed with the answer being that it is consistent with the values of those profs? Conservatives are not generally disposed to new theories or ideas or even examining old ones. This is not a stereotype or generalization: it's a definition. So of course you would expect the social sciences and humanities to be seething mass of liberal thinkers (we used to call those disciplines the Liberal Arts, after all).
ReplyDelete@ crank -
ReplyDeleteDespite your attempt at evasion, it's still insulting to suggest that conservatives don't examine new theories or ideas. That's a silly assertion.
Apart from that you're absolutely right - I expect english professors and social scientists to be liberal. I object only to their refusal to self-identify as such. And it concerns me that, because of this overwhelming leftward lean, our Universities have become some of the least tolerant places for dissent or open discussion. We're no longer graduating free thinkers, and that is a shame on us all.