The Corner

Politics & Policy

And Another Problem Afflicting Higher Education

University of Wyoming campus in Laramie, Wyo. (University of Wyoming/Screenshot via YouTube)

There are quite a few problems with higher education in America today. In a recent City Journal essay, Heather Mac Donald argues that one major issue is how the modern campus has become overwhelmingly feminized.

She writes, “Female dominance of the campus population is intimately tied to the rhetoric of unsafety and victimhood. Females on average score higher than males on the personality trait of neuroticism, defined as anxiety, emotional volatility, and susceptibility to depression. (Mentioning this long-accepted psychological fact got James Damore fired from Google.) Victorian neurasthenia has been reborn on campuses today as alleged trauma inflicted by such monuments of Western literature as Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Hearing an argument that chromosomes, not whim, make males male and females female is another source of alleged existential threat.”

Read the whole thing.

George Leef is the the director of editorial content at the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal. He is the author of The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A Political Fable for Our Time.
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