New Books in History

Ethan W. Ris, "Other People's Colleges: The Origins of American Higher Education Reform" (U Chicago Press, 2022)

Nov 17, 2025
Ethan W. Ris, an assistant professor of higher education leadership, delves into the evolution of American higher education reform in his discussion. He explores the elite ‘academic engineers’ of the early 20th century and their ambitious yet often unsuccessful overhaul efforts. Ris highlights how reformers' push for efficiency and centralization has been met with resistance from institutions valuing autonomy. The podcast also reveals the implications for marginalized groups and critiques the enduring influence of philanthropy on educational policy.
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ANECDOTE

Archival Discovery Led To The Book

  • Ris discovered K–12 reformers were also deeply involved in higher education when he searched archives at Stanford.
  • He traced efforts to two early 20th-century foundations backed by Carnegie and Rockefeller.
INSIGHT

Reform Is The Default Framing

  • Reform equals higher education policy when calls start with 'how do we change colleges'.
  • A dominant consensus now demands efficiency, accountability, and utility from U.S. colleges.
INSIGHT

Efficiency As A Moral Mission

  • Progressive-era reformers sought to impose rational order and 'efficiency' on chaotic social change.
  • They treated colleges as instruments to modernize society rather than merely places of learning.
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