By Buck Goldstein
CHAPEL HILL (October 28, 2021) – In North Carolina, the relationship between the flagship public university and the state seems to be broken and getting worse. And that’s despite the good intentions of the chancellor, the chair of the faculty, and the leader of the Board of Trustees.
Trust is at the foundation of any healthy relationship, whether it’s a marriage, a business partnership, or a sprawling university. Partners must share a vision and trust one another to carry it out. Jonathan Cole, the former provost at Columbia, describes the relationship between a university and the government as “an uneasy compact,” sustained by tacit agreements and mutual understanding. “When trust breaks down, the other values and all that is built on them are in peril.”
In Our Higher Calling, the book I wrote with UNC’s former Chancellor Holden Thorp, we summarized Cole’s concept as a partnership with the public. In exchange for educating a highly competitive workforce and leading the discovery of new knowledge, academic communities will be funded and allowed to run as a meritocracy, with the freedom to both explore and occasionally espouse unpopular ideas. Recognizing that education and discovery are messy enterprises, universities get a freer hand than just about any public entity to run their own affairs. When the trust level is high, this tradeoff works well for both sides. When the trust level is low, it becomes a recipe for disaster.
I’ve witnessed that disturbing spiral at Carolina. I teach a class on higher education with the current chancellor, and I’m well acquainted with many former and current trustees, some of whom were college classmates. I’ve also been a member of the faculty for 17 years. The recent controversy over the failed hiring of Nikole Hannah-Jones in the School of Journalism and Media brought worldwide attention to the dysfunction that’s been building for at least a decade between the University and its governing bodies. Both internal and external forces have contributed to the erosion of trust, threatening a partnership that has benefited North Carolina since 1789.
The internal forces begin with the partners themselves. Faculty, for the most part, do not recognize that academic freedom and shared governance come at a price. Students and their parents expect job-ready graduates who are also equipped to be thoughtful and productive citizens. They expect research that drives the economy and supports a better quality of life for citizens of the state and beyond.
At the same time, trustees are skeptical about the ability of academics — most of whom have little training in business, finance, or politics — to run an institution as massive and complex as a modern research university. There aren’t many multi-billion-dollar enterprises run on consensus-oriented shared governance models, and many trustees would like to see a more top-down approach that prioritizes action over discussion. One trustee, when asked how long it takes to understand the university’s decision-making process, replied, “I hope I live that long.”
For many years, an environment of relative trust was enough to reconcile those different world views. So long as Carolina continued to win basketball games and turn out loyal graduates, there wasn’t much soul-searching about its relationship to the life of the state. Battles were fought over the budget, with trustees asserting increasing interest in governance in the interest of maintaining state funding. When cultural issues such as the removal of a Confederate statue from campus entered the debate, public trust declined, and the University faced greater scrutiny from lawmakers and governing officials. At the same time, these same hot-button issues galvanized large segments of the faculty who had previously paid little attention to governance structures outside their own department or field. Faculty outspokenness led to deepening frustration among trustees, who saw high-profile stands on political issues causing unnecessary friction with legislators and donors.
Chancellors, like institutional leaders across our society, have been caught in the middle, trying to forge compromises that satisfy almost no one. Trustees think the chancellor should be tougher on the faculty, forgetting that the chancellor is a member of the faculty. And fellow academics think the chancellor should stand up to the powers that be, forgetting that chancellors are selected and removed by governing boards. It’s not surprising, then, that turnover in these roles is on the rise across the country. Carolina has had three Chancellors in the last decade.
External factors also play a role. Public support for all institutions has been eroding for decades, a process accelerated by a relentless media culture. Critics are asking whether a college degree is worth it amid a long-term rise in tuition and student debt. (It should be noted that tuition at UNC has remained flat for the last five years.) Calls for greater efficiency and reform come from parents, as well as lawmakers. And even more fundamentally, conservative politicians believe colleges and universities lack viewpoint diversity and turn pliable young people into eager liberals.
The ongoing racial reckoning in America and the controversy over critical race theory have added considerable fuel to the fire. And a significant portion of the faculty now question some of the foundational academic principles that underpin the partnership with the public, rejecting ideals like meritocracy and even elements of free speech as harmful to marginalized members of the community.
Social media and open-meeting laws also contribute to an environment where ideas and policies are litigated on screens, not around a conference table. After a recent off-the-record seminar on university governance, a faculty leader said it was a relief to have an honest conversation about difficult issues without worrying she would say something clumsy or imprecise that could be vilified by her critics or lead to litigation. She noted that public meetings are now highly scripted affairs, offering little opportunity for genuine engagement between faculty and trustees.
All of this has the makings of a genuine if slow-moving crisis. But, perhaps naively, I think there are steps that can restore at least some of the trust that is essential to effective shared governance. The parties need to be willing to pick up the phone, meet for lunch and otherwise talk instead of lobbing public statements at one another. Trust is built person-to-person, not tweet-to-retweet. Trustees should be encouraged to spend time visiting classes and research labs to see the work firsthand, not just hear about it in carefully curated presentations. Faculty need to break bread with trustees and other citizens of the state. Administrators must be transparent and uphold the foundational principles of the university even when their advisors, especially their lawyers, counsel otherwise.
The partnership itself needs to be made more explicit with clear, definable expectations for all parties. A current effort by the Board of Trustees to clarify decision-making authority will, at the very least, focus the conversation and perhaps avoid the kind of micro-managing that handcuffs multi-billion-dollar enterprises. Focusing the conversation on actual performance, instead of the front-page issue of the day, would be great for all involved. Because that’s the irony of this moment in university history — for all the angst and distrust, Carolina is performing its core roles remarkably well. Record enrollment, record research funding, a fundraising campaign that stayed on track even through the whipsaw economy of Covid. On the fundamentals, UNC has rarely been stronger.
That won’t continue if the rift between the campus and the state grows ever wider. The University’s situation must not be sugar-coated. It is serious, and events have converged to place a spotlight on how leadership responds. Any effective way forward has to begin with honesty about where we are now, and that’s a very bad spot.
Buck Goldstein is Professor of the Practice in the School of Education and University Entrepreneur In Residence at UNC Chapel Hill.
Dr. Jane S. Gabin says
Thank you for expressing this. In my own 40-year relationship with UNC (as a doctoral student, instructor, admissions staff member, and community member), I have witnessed this downward spiral. I wonder if it will be repaired during my lifetime.
Withheld due to fear of media backlash. says
That took guts.
Do we love higher education because it works or because it’s our paycheck.
Get better. Get real. Wake up now or when this goes away forever.
Marsha says
It’s a travesty of what certain Pols have done in the last few years not only at Chapel Hill but other Universities in the System. There must be academic freedom in a Democratic Society.
In any higher education setting students will react to new thoughts and ideas. Having attended church related colleges Religion 101 was tough on many when they were taught Old Testament from an academic standpoint versus what was learned in Sunday School. My advice was believe what you want just answer the test questions the way the professor wants.
Sports bring big revenue to many schools in our state system and it’s hard to convince many that the real reason for a university’s existence is academia versus NCAA rankings. I won’t even begin to address the college athlete’s ability to be paid.
We have a clear and present danger in out state driven by a legislature committed not only to destroy public education but the university system too.
I commend Dr Goldstein your article. In closing I would encourage Carolina to ask Michael Jordan and Sam Jones to respond to posing at Silent Sam. Have seen this picture too many times to defend the position it didn’t bother anyone. In my belief they did it because they were African American students at UNC-CH and they didn’t want to fan the flames of racism.
Thanks!
Charles Rose says
Well stated…….but unstated is the clear fact that the breakdown of this partnership has been accompanied and promoted by the rise of the influence of the Republican Party in NC, and especially in memberships of the Boards of Governors and Trustees. The damage is a direct result of that party’s determination to reign in university independence.
Jennifer W Weller says
This is an interesting addition to the recent article in the Chronicle of Higher Education about the increasing size of endowments at major Universities (including the UNC System) with little apparent benefit to those carrying out the basic work of high education. It includes the same redefinition of higher education as a business that this article promotes. Since this rebranding directly contradicts the values of many who contribute to the original mission of education, the loss of trust is not only to be expected, but is well-deserved.
George R. La Noue says
Professor Goldstein’s comments are useful, but focus on only one of North Carolina’s more than 35 campuses. In my research for the Martin Center about which NC campuses sponsor public policy debates or forums with diverse viewpoints, the overall record is remarkably poor. Thus, it is not unreasonable for the public to question whether campuses foster intellectual diversity or academic freedom for dissenting viewpoints. Many issues that are important to voters are not publicly debated on campuses at all. To regain citizen trust campuses and trustees need to address that problem systematically.
David Pardue says
Great summary Buck! You bring the duel perspectives of an outstanding business person and a faculty member, and UNC is fortunate you’re on our side.
Paul Williams says
Trust can be restored only among people who can be trusted. Many in the legislature, the Board of Governors and Boards of Trustees are pursuing an agenda. That agenda was clearly spelled out in a memorandum written by Lewis Powell at the request of the Director of Education of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in 1971. In it Powell spelled out the place to start defending the free enterprise system was in the universities. The Business Roundtable was formed in response and ever since big business has been aggressively trying to reshape the university as it has existed for centuries. The particularly aggressive assaults on the humanities and social sciences (e.g., legislation to bar discussing Critical Race Theory) are not the gestures of people who one can trust to envision the university as most faculty would prefer it to be. People who are bent on destroying the university because they see it as a threat and have been at it for half a century are not going to have a Damascus moment at a coffee break with a faculty member.
Susan Eckblad says
Thank you, Mr. Goldstein, for your insight and analysis that informs rather than blames. Watching from the sidelines, one is tempted to chose sides and label the various players as heroes or enemies. You have helped me better understand the role of each and to hope for a better way forward.
Kay Paul says
Wonderful words. Keep them coming. Katherine Hannan Paul ’58
Bill says
I’m a ‘73 graduate, and I don’t recognize my university anymore. No civil evidence of diversity of opinion or discussion.
The inmates are running the asylum.
Sadly, this is happening all over academia in the USA. I just always thought Carolina was able to rise above this noise with thoughtful , engaging diversity of opinion. They’ve lost me.
Chris Garriss says
A well written article. As with most things I am not 100% in agreement, but that is both reasonable and expected. No two of us will ever 100% agree on anything. Let me state I have no children, but for me education is something that is an investment in our future and our present. The lifeblood of any organization is the abilities and knowledge of those that comprise it. I have been increasingly alarmed and upset by the actions and approach of an increasingly micromanagjng legislature as well as the lack of investment in our educational systems. At all levels. At the K – 12 level I hear increasingly of the lack of text books, the long list of general educational materials that parents are told to supply, the continual cuts to budgets while the state builds record surpluses and wants to use these to reduce or eliminate taxes on corporations and high earners. Trickle down economics under other names – and something that has failed to produce the litany of positives predicted every time it has been put in place. While the University System has many things in common with large corporations, it has even more differences. The two have some common management principles, they have many more that are different. If things continue on the current path, not only will we have dysfunctional primary education systems, we will have a has been University System, third rate in all was that matter. Which will create an environment that attracts businesses that look for cheap labor, not a well educated population.