Defending the CMC Model

 

According to Nico Brancolini in his recent piece for the Forum, our government and economics departments are holding us back.  As a devotee of those hindering disciplines, I felt the need to engage with the notions put forth in his article. Needless to say, I disagree— and perhaps more importantly hope to convince you, dear reader, to side with me.

CMC has consistently ranked between 9-14 over the past decade in U.S. News & World Report's college rankings.

For those of you who have not read the piece, the argument is as follows: Claremont McKenna’s focus on government and economics is a detriment to other departments, and it prevents our beloved school from rising into the top ten liberal arts colleges as ranked by U.S. News and World Report.  Nico goes on to equate our focus on government and economics with the lack of general name recognition.  He offers three main arguments for his position.  First, the best applicants interested in government and economics go to more big-name schools.  Second, name recognition is a factor for attracting prospective freshmen and transfer students.  Third, CMC loses strong faculty in other departments because of our focus.

Let us begin with the supposed link between our name recognition and our focus on government and economics.  I believe that other factors better explain CMC’s lack of name recognition.  We are the only top twenty liberal arts college that is under 100 years old –rather considerably under, given that our 63rd graduating class will receive its diplomas in a few weeks.  This relative youth, coupled with the small size of our graduating classes, means that CMC has relatively few alumni. Indeed, all CMC alumni would not fill the Rose Bowl —we wouldn’t even fill one-fifth of the seats! Youth and the size of our alumni network are far more likely explanations of the lack of name recognition than diversity of academic offerings. Compare our alumni base —likely less than 15,000 —to Harvard, Amherst, or Williams.

Now let us consider Nico’s three points.  Applicants that are the best candidates for government and economics majors will go elsewhere.  Fine.  There really is no way to either prove or disprove this point. So, for the sake of argument, let us assume it is true. Dean Vos has stated that CMC’s goal is to enroll 300 freshmen (110 early decision admits + 190 through regular decision).  Relative to the pool of applicants applying to top schools in the United States, this is a tiny number.  We could not hope to attract the top students in any field, even if we put every resource the college had behind that effort.  Students pick schools based on a whole host of factors: size, weather, proximity to home, social atmosphere, city size, and family ties, among others. CMC cannot be all things to all prospective students.  The campus we offer is, I believe, different from a vast variety of other schools.  As such, it will tend to attract particular students.

Is CMC trapped in a cycle of government and economics majors, as Nico alleges?  Well, the majority of CMCers graduate with a dual or double major.  Often, those second majors are something other than government or economics.  Furthermore, those other departments are not as small as Nico portrays them. CMC actually offers more math courses than government courses (55 math compared to 50 government), and has about as many psychology classes (48) as government. The relative parity of those departments is never mentioned in his article.

As an anonymous do-gooder mentions in the comments section of Nico’s post, graduate schools and employers often know exactly what CMC is and why it is such a fantastic institution.   This comment, though I agree with it, misses Nico’s point.  His friends in Indiana had not heard of CMC, although they have heard of George Washington and USC. Nico was talking about the name identification among peers.  I agree with his analysis of the symptoms, but I disagree with his diagnosis. Age and alumni network are likely to”‘blame.”  Indeed, the school most often garners attention when our professors are quoted in newspapers (see Professor Jack Pitney), donors give major gifts to the school (Robert A. Day and Henry Kravis), or when other elements of those two departments which are “holding us back” shine in the public sphere.

In 1969, Claremont Men's stayed true to its mission, bringing in Senator Ribicoff of Connecticut for commencement to discuss the importance of service.

In 1969, Claremont Men's stayed true to its mission, bringing in Senator Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut for commencement to discuss the importance of service. It was the College's twenty-third graduation ceremony.

Finally, let us address this issue of talent recruitment and retention.  I am not going to speculate as to why Professor Khazeni was denied tenure.  Nico is obviously upset by this fact, and I cannot imagine that the decision thrilled the professor either.  Tenure decisions are made by the Advancement, Promotions, and Tenure committee (APT).  This committee is made up of all tenured professors of the college.  There are a variety of reasons why a professor might be denied tenure, and Nico’s assertion without basis that the professor in question was snubbed is both premature and uninformed. Since he admittedly does not know the standards by which tenure is granted, creating his own standards which show that the professor deserved tenure is not sufficient grounds upon which to claim that the APT committee failed in its duty.

Nico’s vision of a brighter CMC future calls for expanded academic offerings by hiring the best talent to other departments. This plan sounds remarkably like what CMC is already doing. Professor Bassam Frangieh did not appear out of midair. He was recruited by CMC from Yale to create an Arabic program. Associate Professor of Philosophy Suzanne Obdrzalek also was previously featured at Yale. Professor Minxin Pei, one of the world’s leading experts in Asian affairs, is now the head of the Keck Center and an instructor in international relations. One can also look to the two new professors being hired by the history department. These are just a few of many examples of how CMC invests in other departments and why Nico is simply misinformed.

Claremont McKenna cannot be all things to all students; we follow the consortium model. Nowhere does Nico mention that some students come here for that very reason. The schools divvy up responsibility to cover more ground in depth, instead of wasting resources duplicating efforts. That such a young school can excel in two major areas of study— economics and government— should be celebrated, not chastised. Anyone who does the latter did not do their research as a prospective student, and has ignored the most important characteristic of the college process: fit.

 
 
 
  • confused Nico fan

    This argument is so scattered it is difficult to follow.

    So you think CMC should keep focusing on econ on gov, but you also suggest that we are investing in other programs and you don’t seem to think this is a mistake?

    You suggest that CMC is not trapped in a cycle of econ and gov (other programs are larger, you note), yet you praise CMC for that continued focus.

    Altogether, it seems like you are arguing for the status quo. How will the status quo get us out of college rankings stagnation?

    • Try again

      You clearly can’t read very well….the whole point is that being focused on government and economics AND investing in other areas are not mutually exclusive

      Also that Nico overlooks several important factors when determining what constitutes CMC’s ‘lack of name recognition’

  • confused Nico fan

    This argument is so scattered it is difficult to follow.

    So you think CMC should keep focusing on econ on gov, but you also suggest that we are investing in other programs and you don’t seem to think this is a mistake?

    You suggest that CMC is not trapped in a cycle of econ and gov (other programs are larger, you note), yet you praise CMC for that continued focus.

    Altogether, it seems like you are arguing for the status quo. How will the status quo get us out of college rankings stagnation?

    • Try again

      You clearly can’t read very well….the whole point is that being focused on government and economics AND investing in other areas are not mutually exclusive

      Also that Nico overlooks several important factors when determining what constitutes CMC’s ‘lack of name recognition’

  • dumb

    i don’t see the reason to expand our departments when there are the 5 colleges and you can take classes at any other school. to replicate what other schools already have would be counterproductive.

    what holds us back in rankings is not attracting students, it is the “peer review” category in US News… which accounts for a huge percentage of the overall score. basically they ask other university presidents to say what they think of us, and the east coast liberal arts colleges that have been around forever will always say they think each other are the best, that’s just the way it is. hiring 4 more lit profs isn’t going to change their mind, it’s historical. on pure numbers–our students grades, test scores, selectivity, etc–we equal, if not outperform many of the amhersts and williams’s of the world and certainly the middleburys and haverfords. but rankings will never reflect this unless the eliminate the peer review category from the scoring system.

  • dumb

    i don’t see the reason to expand our departments when there are the 5 colleges and you can take classes at any other school. to replicate what other schools already have would be counterproductive.

    what holds us back in rankings is not attracting students, it is the “peer review” category in US News… which accounts for a huge percentage of the overall score. basically they ask other university presidents to say what they think of us, and the east coast liberal arts colleges that have been around forever will always say they think each other are the best, that’s just the way it is. hiring 4 more lit profs isn’t going to change their mind, it’s historical. on pure numbers–our students grades, test scores, selectivity, etc–we equal, if not outperform many of the amhersts and williams’s of the world and certainly the middleburys and haverfords. but rankings will never reflect this unless the eliminate the peer review category from the scoring system.

  • Charlie Sprague

    First, although Pei is awsome and a huge benefit for the school, the international relations “department” is not separate, but part of the government department. Although I personally am ok with Gov/Econ having an oversized role on campus, I do think IR should be its own department.

    Second, if people want CMC to expand its course offerings in other departments and diversify its academic strengths, they should be strong advocates of school expansion. As someone about to graduate, I have a self-interested reason to support school expansion (more alumni, more prominent school reputation, etc), but people that want CMC to be more like other liberal arts colleges should be with me on this one. When we have more students here, probability suggests we will have more non Gov/Econ majors and the school will hire more faculty for those other departments. Moreover, although we are a small school for many reasons, I would suggest that there are efficiency gains to increasing the student body size of CMC (in terms of cost per student of providing an excellent eduction)

    Third, we are building a new joint science center for a reason. CMC is and absolutely should be striving to improve its math/science departments

    Fourth, I know there are people at this school who dislike how Gov/Econ focused the school is. Those people really have little right to complain about that fact because they absolutely should have done research about CMC to determine its social science bent before accepting. I do sympathize, however, with people that are worried about this school becoming too dominated by finance (due to the expansion of the Robert Day School of Economics and Finance) see
    http://cmcforum.com/opinion/02072009-cmc-future-wharton-of-the-west
    I don’t feel like a hypocrite for worrying that this change will negatively affect CMC’s culture (by making it feel too much like an undergrad b-school) because I had no idea this was going to happen when I accepted as a senior in HS. Let me reiterate- CMC absolutely should have accepted Day’s money and built his school, but I think it will change cmc’s culture in undesirable ways

  • Charlie Sprague

    First, although Pei is awsome and a huge benefit for the school, the international relations “department” is not separate, but part of the government department. Although I personally am ok with Gov/Econ having an oversized role on campus, I do think IR should be its own department.

    Second, if people want CMC to expand its course offerings in other departments and diversify its academic strengths, they should be strong advocates of school expansion. As someone about to graduate, I have a self-interested reason to support school expansion (more alumni, more prominent school reputation, etc), but people that want CMC to be more like other liberal arts colleges should be with me on this one. When we have more students here, probability suggests we will have more non Gov/Econ majors and the school will hire more faculty for those other departments. Moreover, although we are a small school for many reasons, I would suggest that there are efficiency gains to increasing the student body size of CMC (in terms of cost per student of providing an excellent eduction)

    Third, we are building a new joint science center for a reason. CMC is and absolutely should be striving to improve its math/science departments

    Fourth, I know there are people at this school who dislike how Gov/Econ focused the school is. Those people really have little right to complain about that fact because they absolutely should have done research about CMC to determine its social science bent before accepting. I do sympathize, however, with people that are worried about this school becoming too dominated by finance (due to the expansion of the Robert Day School of Economics and Finance) see
    http://cmcforum.com/opinion/02072009-cmc-future-wharton-of-the-west
    I don’t feel like a hypocrite for worrying that this change will negatively affect CMC’s culture (by making it feel too much like an undergrad b-school) because I had no idea this was going to happen when I accepted as a senior in HS. Let me reiterate- CMC absolutely should have accepted Day’s money and built his school, but I think it will change cmc’s culture in undesirable ways

  • Tiger Motherf@#king Woods

    If CMC is going to be a world class school, we are going to need some world class golf facilities. We’ll see how “P.M” Pei’s Asian affairs knowledge holds up while he’s swingin’ away in the Chinese grass off the 8th fairway!

  • Tiger Motherf@#king Woods

    If CMC is going to be a world class school, we are going to need some world class golf facilities. We’ll see how “P.M” Pei’s Asian affairs knowledge holds up while he’s swingin’ away in the Chinese grass off the 8th fairway!