Despite the catastrophic job market, at least current students can use the present-day crisis as a teachable moment. No matter how bad things may be, the university must strive to create positive educational debates and experiences.
It is not the responsibility of the university to provide answers to student's questions of morality and identity. But a university has a responsibility not to stifle debate; rather it must enable students to feel free to ask questions. The university must encourage graduates to comfortably tolerate ambiguity and diversity of beliefs amongst their fellow students and within their own hearts. In this tolerance of diversity, of course, there is an implied moral system to some degree, just as there is in Kohlberg's prioritization of moralistic abstractions. The modern university that values ethical questioning must allow for multiplicity of opinions. This tolerance is not cross-culturally universal in its nature. But for an American university, located in a diverse world, a school that seeks to prepare students for a global community and a mosaic of cultures in America, part of the learning process for students must be having a certain kind of open-mindedness or at least the ability to engage in dialogue with others with different opinions.
All students embark upon a journey self-exploration in college. As they stretch their ability to learn about others, and try on new personas, they must allow others to do the same. As the university serves all students it cannot permit narrow-mindedness -- of opinions and even of specialization in academic study. Breadth and depth must be fostered in course offerings and interdisciplinary learning. A...
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