Is College Making People Stupider?

Yes.

Recently, I overheard my granddaughter reciting this old rhyme:

Girls go to college
To get more knowledge
Boys go to Jupiter
To get more stupider.

The obvious anti-male bias aside, this is a clever little ditty, at least to a nine-year-old. But I fear she may have it wrong. From what I see on campus and in the country at large, too many people who go to college these days—boys and girls both—do not, in fact, acquire more useful knowledge; they just get stupider. And the worst part is, they don’t even know it.

The poster person for this phenomenon is Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who has a degree in economics and politics yet doesn’t know the first thing about either. Her monumental ignorance, which is exceeded only by her smug confidence in her own intellectual superiority, was on full display last week at the Munich Security Conference, where, among other things, she claimed that Venezuela is south of the Equator and disputed Marco Rubio’s observation that Spanish explorers introduced horses to the American Southwest.

As the great Thomas Sowell put it, “There have always been ignorant people, but they haven’t always had college degrees to make them unaware of their ignorance. Some people imagine that they are well-informed because they have memorized a whole galaxy of trendy dogmas and fashionable attitudes.”

Unfortunately, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and her ilk are merely emblematic of the current negative trend in higher education, which appears to have reached the downhill side of the inverted U-curve. You’re probably familiar with the concept. The basic premise is that something can get better as it climbs toward the top of the curve, but once it reaches and passes that point, it begins to get worse. For example, some research shows that in elementary education, student performance improves as class size increases—but only up to about 24 students. Beyond that point, outcomes begin to decline.

I’m afraid higher education is on a similar trajectory. For years, the value of a degree rose as education also improved people’s lives. Now I’m not so sure. These days, it appears that for many people, having a degree—or multiple degrees—is counterproductive: they literally become stupider as a result, or at least more ignorant. Perhaps that is because, to paraphrase Ronald Reagan, they “know” so much that isn’t true.

Consider the COVID-19 “pandemic,” when tens of thousands of college students were convinced that the virus was a deadly threat to them, that wearing a cloth mask could protect them from it, and that the mRNA “vaccines” would end the pandemic. None of those things turned out to be true, and at least the first two were known to be false as early as the spring of 2020. But college kids believed the lies they were told not just by the media but by faculty and administrators at their institutions.

Of course, they weren’t the only ones. Millions of Americans were fooled. But you would think people with college degrees, or at least pursuing degrees, would be better at finding information, thinking critically, and reaching logical conclusions. Apparently not. If anything, the more “education” a person had, the more likely they were to buy into the nonsense.

Then there were the pro-Palestinian “protests” that erupted on campuses across the nation during the spring and summer of 2024. Numerous “man-on-the-street” interviews, like this one, revealed that many of the students chanting “from the river to the sea” could not identify either the river or the sea in question. Nor did they realize they were calling for the eradication of the Jewish state. They didn’t know that there was no such country called Palestine or that Jews had lived in that region for thousands of years. They also had no idea how the modern nation of Israel was formed.

And keep in mind, these protests took place mostly on “elite” campuses, supposedly reserved for the best and brightest among us.

Finally, we have the current anti-ICE protests on campuses. Again, you would think college students might have at least a basic grasp of American civics. But these kids seem not to understand that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is a federal law enforcement agency tasked with enforcing laws passed by duly elected members of Congress and upheld by the judiciary. Protesters act as though this is some sort of strong-arm tactic on the part of the Trump administration, “authoritarianism,” utterly ignorant not only of civics but of recent history—the fact that millions of illegal aliens were deported under Clinton and Obama, too. (Read Peter Wood’s and Jared Gould’s “Universities Push Sanctuary Campus Agenda for Illegal Immigrants.”)

I recognize that some young people need to go to college to pursue their chosen profession. I also believe a solid liberal arts education, if you can find one, has great intrinsic value. But for too many, a college education seems to have devolved into a net negative. They come out with a degree that signifies few if any real skills, believing absurd things like men can become women and collectivism is the path to freedom.

Sadly, they couldn’t get any stupider even if they did somehow make it to Jupiter.

Follow Rob Jenkins on X.

  1. Thankful that I found this article…

    Proof that there is life beyond “X”.

  2. Someone in our universities is selecting the professors. That person, or those persons, would be expected to select well educated people who can energize their students to pursue knowledge.

    But that is obviously not happening. Those persons chosen to teach appear to be bound by a political narrative which dismisses the possibility of intellectual curiosity; and seeks to create a uniform, biased, narrow vision of reality. And presumably this means that the person or persons who do the “choosing” are incompetent at their jobs.

    What could be left? Essentially creating “trade school,” focused on applied skills. That isn’t what the university was intended to do, but if those who do the “choosing” cannot be trusted to choose professors who invite intellectual curiosity, perhaps they could be trusted to teach job skills; we need both.

    1. Professors select new professors

  3. Is College Making People Stupider?

    No, it’s just that more stupid people go to college.

    1. Two things can be true at once.

  4. What your Palestinian and ICE hot takes could be missing are that, to some degree, they’re protesting tactics.

    Like maybe don’t kill several thousand kids and grandmothers in Palestine and be a little more surgical here in the US rounding up illegals.

    I would assume less outrage with more humane tactics in both cases.

    That’s not dumb or stupider (lol). It’s reasonable.

    1. tactics… who’s tactics are you referring to, spitting, cursing, throwing frozen water bottles and bricks at agents. throwing around terminology like racist, nazi and facist for doing your job. these people are paid trouble makers with professional traing and commercial signs. they should be arrested

    2. Maybe Hamas shouldn’t shelter among kids and grandmothers, there’s no such state as “Palestine”, and the ICE activities have been very targeted, they just haven’t ignored illegal aliens they weren’t targeting. Not knowing those things is both dumb and stupid.

    3. In states that are not sanctuary states it’s very easy for ICE to be more surgical-when an illegal alien is arrested or in court or being released from prison ICE is notified and comes to pick those to be deported up from custody, with no fuss. That’s how the system is supposed to work, and does, in all the other places you don’t hear about because nothing happens. Sanctuary states refuse to cooperate with other parts of government because they pick which laws they want to enforce, with the result we see.

  5. One troubling trend: innumeracy. What are the risks of dying of a disease versus the risks of dying from the vaccine for that disease?

  6. While I’m inclined to agree, I am also reminded that American academia was championing the Eugenics movement a century ago, and how’d that turn out?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *