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When Experimental Was Mainstream: The Rise and Fall of Experimental Colleges, 1957–1979

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2019

Abstract

Throughout the late 1950s and 1960s, dozens of experimental colleges were founded across the United States. While these institutions are usually remembered as either a fringe movement of the 1960s or a niche for nonconformist students, this essay argues that their genesis was markedly mainstream. Drawing from popular trends, higher education leaders in the late 1950s designed the institutions to be the most efficient means of educating a rapidly growing population into an open-minded, liberally educated citizenry. Despite initial growth, by the end of the 1960s, rifts emerged between students and experimental college leaders. These conflicts, combined with a broader loss of material and ideological support, led the movement to lose its legitimacy as a mainstream reform. By highlighting the history of experimental colleges, this essay prompts a reconsideration of this movement's importance and its connections to larger trends in undergraduate and general education in the mid-twentieth century.

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Copyright © History of Education Society 2019 

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References

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4 This paper examines experimental colleges that were comprehensive undergraduate programs and comprised the entirety of students’ coursework for at least two years. These were created as either stand-alone institutions or independent subcolleges within a larger university.

5 Barbara K. Townsend, L. J. Newell, and Michael D. Wiese, “Creating Distinctiveness: Lessons from Uncommon Colleges and Universities” (Washington, DC: George Washington University, School of Education and Human Development, 1992), iv, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED356702.pdf; and Kliewer, Joy Rosenzweig, The Innovative Campus: Nurturing the Distinctive Learning Environment (Phoenix: Oryx Press, 1999)Google Scholar.

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8 This essay draws from several types of sources to capture the breadth of this movement. To understand experimental colleges’ popularity and connections to mainstream educators, I examined professional higher education journals from 1955 to 1980, such as the Association of American Colleges Bulletin (Liberal Education after 1959), AAUP Bulletin, and Daedalus, supplementing this with selected foundation and government reports. I paid particular attention to AAC Annual Meeting notes, including an exhaustive review of the Presidential, Board of Directors, and Liberal Arts Committee's reports. To study the many individual colleges that made up this movement, I drew from online and local library sources. Some institutions had extensive online archives and received substantial newspaper coverage, while for others I had to rely on secondary sources. Finally, to understand the intellectual and social context of the period, I referenced secondary literature.

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21 Despite national acclaim for the proposal, leadership changes at the sponsoring institutions shelved the plan. Hampshire was formally founded in 1965, after a renewed campaign for development. For clarity, I refer to the initial proposal as the New College Plan and the eventual college as Hampshire.

22 Barber et al., The New College Plan, 4.

23 Distler, “Report of Executive Director,” 1959; and Longsworth, “A Brave New World.”

24 Hamilton, Thomas H. and Varner, Durward B., “Curriculum Michigan State University-Oakland” (Rochester: Michigan State University-Oakland, 1959)Google Scholar; and Riesman, Gusfield, and Gamson, Academic Values and Mass Education, 19–37.

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27 The Fund for the Advancement of Education, Decade of Experiment: The Fund for the Advancement of Education 1951–61 (New York: Fund for the Advancement of Education, 1961), 91Google Scholar. Faust also served as President of the Ford Foundation's Fund for the Advancement of Education. For simplicity, I refer to both closely related organizations as the Ford Foundation in this essay. For more on the foundations, see Woodring, Paul, Investment in Innovation: An Historical Appraisal of the Fund for the Advancement of Education (Boston: Little, Brown, 1970)Google Scholar; and Thelin, John R., Philanthropy and American Higher Education (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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33 Hatch, “The Experimental College”; and Distler, “Report of Executive Director,” 1959, 127–29. The AAC Executive Director Reports in 1961 and 1963 also praised experimental colleges.

34 Cohen-Cole, The Open Mind, 1–37.

35 McGrath, Earl James, “General Education: A Revival,” Liberal Education 45, no. 3 (Oct. 1959), 345–60Google Scholar; Distler, Theodore A., “Report of Executive Director,” Liberal Education 46, no. 1 (March 1960), 131–37Google Scholar; and Gregory, Edgar, “The Specialists and the New Education,” Liberal Education 46, no. 4 (Dec. 1960), 484–88Google Scholar.

36 Hamilton and Varner, “Curriculum Michigan State University-Oakland,” 13.

37 Barber et al., The New College Plan, 5.

38 From Monteith's founding plan, as quoted in Riesman, Gusfield, and Gamson, Academic Values and Mass Education, 44.

39 Cohen-Cole, The Open Mind, 99; Weigle, Richard D., “Commission on Liberal Education,” Association of American Colleges Bulletin 43, no. 1 (March 1957), 165–66Google Scholar; and Gregory, “The Specialists and the New Education.”

40 McGrath, “General Education: A Revival,” 345.

41 Hatch, “The Experimental College,” 7.

42 Hayes, “A History of the College of Social Studies”; and Joy S. Rosenzweig, “The Innovative Colleges and Universities of the 1960s and 1970s: What Keeps the Dreams of Experimentation Alive?,” paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for the Study of Higher Education, Albuquerque, NM, Nov. 1997, 13–16, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED415810.pdf.

43 C. Westerman, “Monteith College Archives Collection Papers, 1958–1972,” 2–3, http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/WSR000453.pdf; Hofstra College Study Committee, “Proposal for the Establishment of an Experimental College,” 209–10; and Barber et al., The New College Plan, 8–10.

44 Pells, The Liberal Mind in a Conservative Age, ix; and Cohen-Cole, The Open Mind, 7.

45 Fund, Rockefeller Brothers, The Pursuit of Excellence: Education and the Future of America (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1958), ixGoogle Scholar.

46 Faust, “Rising Enrollments and Effective Use of Faculty Resources,” 260.

47 CSC Palos Verdes is now known as CSU Dominguez Hills. Julian Hartt, “Small College Planned Within Large College,” Los Angeles Times, July 26, 1964, B1.

48 Quotation from Barber et al., The New College Plan, 9. For Beloit and New College of Florida, see Hayward, Sumner, “Beloit Plan,” Liberal Education 50, no. 3 (Oct. 1964), 335–48Google Scholar; and Elmendorf, John, “New College, Sarasota, Florida,” in The New Colleges: Toward an Appraisal, ed. Dressel, Paul L. (Iowa City, IA: The American College Testing Program, and The American Association for Higher Education, 1971), 177–84Google Scholar.

49 Hamilton and Varner, “Curriculum Michigan State University-Oakland”; Hayes, “A History of the College of Social Studies”; Elmendorf, “New College”; and Barber et al., The New College Plan. For another proposal, see Megaw, Neill, “A Proposal for a New College of Liberal Arts,” AAUP Bulletin 47, no. 4 (Dec. 1961), 330–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

50 Barber et al., The New College Plan, 9.

51 Hayward, , “Liberal Arts College in a World in Transition,” Liberal Education 51, no. 4 (Dec. 1965), 495Google Scholar; and Hofstra College Study Committee, “Proposal for the Establishment of an Experimental College.”

52 Cohen-Cole, The Open Mind, 105–7; and Pells, The Liberal Mind in a Conservative Age, 186.

53 Kerr, Clark, The Uses of the University (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1963), 5Google Scholar. For effects on undergraduates, see 48–49.

54 “Clark Kerr and the Founding of UC Santa Cruz,” interview by Randall Jarrell, Feb. 2, 1989, Regional History Project, UCSC Library, 1–2, https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9bw645n9.

55 As quoted in Gaff, The Cluster College, 107.

56 Kliewer, The Innovative Campus, 119–21.

57 As quoted in Hayes, “A History of the College of Social Studies,” 17.

58 Pells, The Liberal Mind in a Conservative Age, 346; and Brick, Age of Contradiction, xiv.

59 Hamilton and Varner, “Curriculum Michigan State University-Oakland,” 7.

60 Barber et al., The New College Plan, 7.

61 Hartt, “Small College Planned Within Large College”; Johnson, “Hofstra Takes Wraps Off Its Speed-Up Plan”; and Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 220.

62 Hofstra College Study Committee, “Proposal for the Establishment of an Experimental College”; and Hayward, “Beloit Plan.”

63 Katrina Green, “Monteith College: Spreading Innovation,” in Newell et al., Maverick Colleges, 58; and Theodore M. Newcomb et al., “Self-Selection and Change,” in Gaff, The Cluster College, 137–60. While experimental colleges sought to expand access, few directly discussed racial or gender inclusion (as is apparent in the earlier quote about education for the “free man”). At schools like Monteith and Hofstra's New College, increasing access meant including commuter and working-class students. At others, like Hampshire and Wesleyan, it simply meant educating more students without sacrificing quality. Pitzer was an exception to this for women, and SUNY Old Westbury and Livingston College prioritized access for racial minorities.

64 Quotation from Hatch, “The Experimental College,” 2; and Fund for the Advancement of Education, Decade of Experiment.

65 For example, in 1969 over 50 percent of students supported pass-fail grading. Trow, Martin A., Aspects of American Higher Education, 1969–1975 (Berkeley, CA: Carnegie Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education, 1977), 14Google Scholar. For the spread of other reforms, see Fred M. Hechinger, “Some Campus Reforms Come Quietly,” New York Times, May 18, 1969, E11.

66 Mario Savio, “Sit-in Address on the Steps of Sproul Hall” (speech, University of California at Berkeley, Dec. 2, 1964), American Rhetoric, https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mariosaviosproulhallsitin.htm; and Rossinow, Douglas C., The Politics of Authenticity: Liberalism, Christianity, and the New Left in America (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998)Google Scholar.

67 These student-run “experimental colleges” and “free universities” are different from the comprehensive institutions included in this essay because they only enabled students to take a limited number of courses to supplement their traditional education. Brann, James W., “San Francisco Students Run Own ‘College,’Chronicle of Higher Education 1, no. 3 (Dec. 21, 1966), 1, 4Google Scholar.

68 Lichtman, Jane, Bring Your Own Bag. A Report on Free Universities (Washington, DC: American Association for Higher Education, 1973)Google Scholar, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED108562.pdf.

69 Man of the Year: The Inheritor,” Time 89, no. 1 (Jan. 6, 1967), 24Google Scholar.

70 Rossinow, The Politics of Authenticity, 1–2.

71 For a typical critique of student activists, see Herndl, George C., “Time of the New Generation,” Liberal Education 53, no. 2 (May 1967), 173Google Scholar.

72 This editorial first appeared in The Cresset, Borrowed Editorial: Reflections on Berkeley,” Liberal Education 51, no. 2 (May 1965), 316Google Scholar.

73 Joint Statement on Rights and Freedoms of Students,” AAUP Bulletin 54, no. 2 (1968), 258261Google Scholar; and AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” Liberal Education 54, no. 1 (March 1968), 110–20Google Scholar.

74 Butterfield, Victor L., “Counter-Attack in Liberal Learning,” Liberal Education 52, no. 1 (March 1966), 8Google Scholar. Along with founding Wesleyan's experimental cluster colleges, in 1968 Butterfield was appointed director of the AAC's Special Committee on Liberal Studies, and from 1969 to 1970 he was acting president at New College of Florida. “Victor L. Butterfield Dies at 71; President Emeritus of Wesleyan,” New York Times, Nov. 20, 1975, 44.

75 As cited in Francis P. Koster, “Study of an ‘Experiment’: Old Westbury College. An Analysis of the Failure of a State Supported Experimental College,” 1976, 32–33, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED111231.pdf. Biographical information from Wolfgang Saxon, “Samuel B. Gould, 86, Unifier of SUNY, Dies,” New York Times, July 16, 1997, A17.

76 Butterfield, “Counter-Attack in Liberal Learning,” 8.

77 Like Faust, Ward also served at Chicago under Hutchins. “Clarence H. Faust Dead at 74; Teacher and Aide of Ford Fund,” New York Times, May 22, 1975, 42.

78 Ford Foundation, Annual Report 1968 (New York: Ford Foundation, 1968), 19aGoogle Scholar. This matches Reuben's analysis of the Ford Foundation's efforts to work with activists. Reuben, Julie A., “Consorting with the Barbarians at the Gate: McGeorge Bundy, the Ford Foundation, and Student Activism in the Late 1960s,” in Making the American Century: Essays on the Political Culture of Twentieth Century America, ed. Schulman, Bruce J. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014)Google Scholar.

79 Ford Foundation, Annual Report 1967 (New York: Ford Foundation, 1967), 3334Google Scholar; and Ford Foundation, Annual Report 1968, 19a.

80 In fact, Mario Savio lamented the university's lack of support for Tussman's Experimental College at Berkeley. Hollinger, David A., “A View from the Margins,” in The Free Speech Movement: Reflections on Berkeley in the 1960s, ed. Cohen, Robert and Zelnik, Reginald E. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002), 178–84Google Scholar.

81 Newcomb et al., “Self-Selection and Change,” 148. The Residential College was spearheaded by Theodore Newcomb, whose prior teaching experience and psychological research at Bennington had reinforced his focus on community. Gamson, Zelda F., Boyk, Barbara, and Gipson, Gay, “Experimental College Grads: Getting Theirs,” Change 9, no. 9 (Sept. 1977), 4849CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

82 Newcomb et al., “Self-Selection and Change,” 145; Paul Heist and John Bilorusky, “A Special Breed of Student,” in Gaff, The Cluster College, 99; and Trow, Habits of Mind.

83 Professors also supported partnership by helping eliminate paternalistic in loco parentis policies. Julie A. Reuben, “The Limits of Freedom: Student Activists and Educational Reform at Berkeley in the 1960s,” in Cohen and Zelnik, The Free Speech Movement: Reflections on Berkeley in the 1960s, 490.

84 Harris Wofford, “Creating an Experimental College of a State University with Students as Full Partners” (Jan. 1970), 1, http://www.oldwestburyoralhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/WoffordHarrisL-CreatingExperimentalCollege-Jan1970-pp46.pdf.

85 Bruce Delbridge and Noel Bourasaw, “President Bunke Answers Questions,” The Western Washington State College Collegian (Bellingham, WA), Sept. 23, 1966, A8.

86 “A [Student] Proposal for Hampshire College,” Feb. 2, 1966, https://compass.fivecolleges.edu/object/hampshire:1243; Dean E. Clabaugh, “Planning for the Evergreen State College: History and Progress,” June 15, 1970, http://archives.evergreen.edu/1971/1971-01/planningtesc_June1970.pdf; and Sanford, Nevitt, “The Campus Crisis in Authority,” Educational Record 51, no. 2 (Spring 1970), 112–16Google Scholar.

87 “A [Student] Proposal for Hampshire College,” 1. Students’ and leaders’ desire for individual freedom was also tied to the growing influence of humanistic psychology in the mid-1960s, which emphasized personal liberation and individuality. Rossinow, The Politics of Authenticity; and Herman, Ellen, “Being and Doing: Humanistic Psychology and the Spirit of the 1960s,” in Sights on the Sixties, ed. Tischler, Barbara L. (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1992)Google Scholar.

88 Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 224.

89 Mervyn L. Cadwallader, “Experiment at San Jose,” paper presented at the Conference on Alternative Higher Education, Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA, Sept. 1981, 6–8, http://archives.evergreen.edu/1982/1982-09/1981-HE-Alternatives_Conf/CadwalladerM-Experiment_at_San-Jose.pdf.

90 Sanford, “The Campus Crisis in Authority”; Wofford, “Creating an Experimental College,” 12–13; Kliewer, The Innovative Campus, 114–45; and Butterfield, “Counter-Attack in Liberal Learning.”

91 Pells, The Liberal Mind in a Conservative Age, 368–80; and Cohen-Cole, The Open Mind, 217–51.

92 Dyke, Nella Van, “The Location of Student Protest: Patterns of Activism at American Universities in the 1960s,” in Student Protest: The Sixties and After, ed. De Groot, Gerard J. (New York: Addison Wesley Longman, 1998), 2736Google Scholar.

93 Marcuse, Herbert, “Repressive Tolerance,” in A Critique of Pure Tolerance, ed. Wolff, Robert Paul, Moore, Barrington Jr., and Marcuse, Herbert (Boston: Beacon Press, 1965), 81Google Scholar.

94 Also see The Embattled University,” special issue, Daedalus 99, no. 1 (Jan. 1970)Google Scholar.

95 Charlie Bright and Michelle McClellan, “A Short History of the Residential College at the University of Michigan,” June 2015, https://lsa.umich.edu/rc/about-us/history-of-the-residential-college.html.

96 “Snyder-Phillips Hall,” MSU Facts, June 26, 2011, http://msufacts.tumblr.com/post/6945423428/snyphi.

97 “Provost's Commission on Snyder-Phillips Report: Co-Educational Living, 1970” folder 34, box 2318, Office of the Secretary of the Board of Trustees Records, UA.1.2, Michigan State University Archives and Historical Collections, East Lansing, MI.

98 As summarized by MacDonald, Gary B., Five Experimental Colleges: Bensalem, Antioch-Putney, Franconia, Old Westbury, Fairhaven (New York: Harper & Row, 1973), 199Google Scholar.

99 As cited in Bright and McClellan, “A Short History of the Residential College,” 4.

100 Coyne, John, “Bensalem: When the Dream Died,” Change 4, no. 8 (Oct. 1972), 40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

101 Cadwallader, “Experiment at San Jose,” 8. Cadwallader also worked at Old Westbury and The Evergreen State College.

102 Educational Advisory Committee, “Report of the Educational Advisory Committee to the President of Hampshire College,” April 13, 1966, in Five College Compass Digital Collections, https://compass.fivecolleges.edu/object/hampshire:1253; Melvin Cherno, interview by Harvey Burdick, July 8, 1999, Oakland University Chronicles, Oakland University Archives and Historical Collections, https://our.oakland.edu/bitstream/handle/10323/1495/Cherno.pdf; Packard, “Fairhaven: Harbinger or Hostage?”; and Lyon, David N., “Embryo: A Radical Experiment in Learning,” Journal of Higher Education 50, no. 1 (Jan. 1979), 3047Google Scholar.

103 “A [Student] Proposal for Hampshire College.” For students’ questioning of faculty authority beyond experimental colleges, see Reuben, “The Limits of Freedom.”

104 As cited in Bright and McClellan, “A Short History of the Residential College,” 3.

105 Harris Wofford, “Letter to New Colleagues,” Sept. 25, 1968, 7, Old Westbury Oral History Project, http://www.oldwestburyoralhistory.org/topics/primary-documents/.

106 Wofford, “New College at Old Westbury,” 191.

107 “New College at Old Westbury,” 192. For more on students’ view of participatory democracy, see Miller, Jim, Democracy Is in the Streets: From Port Huron to the Siege of Chicago (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994)Google Scholar.

108 Cited in Wofford, “New College at Old Westbury,” 190.

109 “A [Student] Proposal for Hampshire College,” 2.

110 Cadwallader, “Experiment at San Jose,” 10; MacDonald, Five Experimental Colleges, 200; and Lyon, “Embryo,” 36–40. For more on students, see Reuben, “The Limits of Freedom,” 490–92.

111 Hofstra College Study Committee, “Proposal for the Establishment of an Experimental College,” 205.

112 Newcomb et al., “Self-Selection and Change,” 142; Ronnald W. Farland and Stephen M. Bragg, “The Paracollege Image: A Study of Students’ Attitudes” (Northfield, MN: Office of Educational Research, St. Olaf College, Jan. 1972), https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED069229.pdf; and Heist and Bilorusky, “A Special Breed of Student.”

113 Harris Wofford, “Dreams and Realities: How Big the Wave?,” in MacDonald, Five Experimental Colleges, 159–60.

114 Wofford, “Creating an Experimental College,” 13. At Old Westbury, which enrolled a substantial proportion of black and Puerto Rican students from New York City, additional conflicts existed between the nonconformist white students and the more academically focused minorities.

115 Kahn, Michael, “The Kresge Experiment,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology 21, no. 2 (Spring 1981), 66Google Scholar.

116 Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 189.

117 Lyon, “Embryo,” 33–37.

118 Thompson, Lyle, “Johnston College: An In-Depth Description of a Successful Experiment,” AAUP Bulletin 59, no. 4 (Dec. 1974), 415Google Scholar.

119 Robert Edgar, as cited in Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 80.

120 As described in Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 78.

121 Coyne, “Bensalem.”

122 Kliewer, The Innovative Campus, 95–145; Townsend, Newell, and Wiese, “Creating Distinctiveness,” 43–44; Karla Vallance, “Evergreen: Can a College of the ’60s Survive [the] ’80s?,” Christian Science Monitor, Feb. 17, 1983, B13; and Jones, Richard M. and Smith, Barbara Leigh, Against the Current: Reform and Experimentation in Higher Education (Cambridge, MA: Schenkman Publishing, 1984), 30Google Scholar.

123 Coyne, “Bensalem”; M. A. Farber, “Life and Death of a Far-Out College,” New York Times, April 26, 1971, 1, 45; Bright and McClellan, “A Short History of the Residential College,” 5; and Kerr, Clark, The Great Transformation in Higher Education, 1960–1980 (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991), 331Google Scholar.

124 Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 16. For a broader description of Riesman's relationship with student activists, see Geary, “Children of the Lonely Crowd.”

125 AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” Liberal Education 61, no. 1 (March 1975), 4657Google Scholar; and Michael Bryan, “The Great Inflation: 1965–1982,” Federal Reserve History, Nov. 22, 2013, https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great_inflation.

126 Snyder, Thomas D., ed., 120 Years of American Education: A Statistical Portrait (Washington, DC: US Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement, National Center for Education Statistics, 1993)Google Scholar.

127 Riesman, Gusfield, and Gamson, Academic Values and Mass Education, 47; and William Trombley, “New College Treads Thin Academic Line,” Los Angeles Times, Sept. 10, 1972, D4.

128 “Deficit Ends Franconia College Experiment,” Washington Post, Jan. 24, 1978, A3.

129 E. Ann Adams, “Prescott: From Parson to Parsimony,” in Newell et al., Maverick Colleges, 83–85; and Grant and Riesman, The Perpetual Dream, 247–52.

130 Woodring, Investment in Innovation, 262–64; Riesman, Gusfield, and Gamson, Academic Values and Mass Education, 43; Reuben, “Consorting with the Barbarians at the Gate,” 206; Ford Foundation, Annual Report 1972 (New York: Ford Foundation, 1972)Google Scholar; and AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” Liberal Education 63, no. 2 (May 1977), 351–60Google Scholar.

131 Pryor, J. H. et al. , “The American Freshman: Forty Year Trends” (Los Angeles: Higher Education Research Institute, Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, 2007)Google Scholar; and Brint, Steven G. et al. , “From the Liberal to the Practical Arts in American Colleges and Universities: Organizational Analysis and Curricular Change,” Journal of Higher Education 76, no. 2 (March 2005), 151–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For an overview of this shift in attitudes, see Horowitz, Helen Lefkowitz, Campus Life: Undergraduate Cultures from the End of the Eighteenth Century to the Present (New York: A. A. Knopf, 1987), 245–62Google Scholar.

132 Trow, Aspects of American Higher Education, 1969–1975, 14.

133 Gamson, Boyk, and Gipson, “Experimental College Grads,” 48; Lyon, “Embryo”; and Robert Reinhold, “At Brown, Trend Is Back to Grades and Tradition,” New York Times, Feb. 24, 1974, 1. Brown is not included in table 1 because it involved the campus-wide reform of an existing institution (which was initiated by students in 1967), but it embodies many of the reforms implemented at experimental colleges in the 1960s. Magaziner, Ira and Maxwell, Elliot [with others] The Magaziner-Maxwell Report: The Seed of a Curricular Revolution at Brown (1967; repr., Providence, RI: Open Jar Foundation, 2011)Google Scholar.

134 Packard, “Fairhaven: Harbinger or Hostage?,” 90; and Lyon, “Embryo,” 42.

135 Ness, Frederic W., “Address of the President,” Liberal Education 59, no. 1 (March 1973), 74Google Scholar.

136 AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” Liberal Education 59, no. 1 (March 1973), 4051Google Scholar; Goldberg, Maxwell H., “Vocational Training, Career Orientation, and Liberal Education,” Liberal Education 61, no. 3 (Oct. 1975), 309–18Google Scholar; and Ness, Frederic W., “Address of the President,” Liberal Education 62, no. 2 (May 1976), 308–15Google Scholar.

137 AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” March 1973, 48.

138 Shoben, Edward Joseph, “Commission on Liberal Learning,” Liberal Education 59, no. 1 (March 1973), 32Google Scholar; AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” May 1977; and AAC Board of Directors, “Report of the Board of Directors,” Liberal Education 64, no. 2 (May 1978), 199206Google Scholar.

139 As cited in Green, “Monteith College: Spreading Innovation,” 61. For further detail, see Pauline Manusho, “WSU Kills Monteith, Plans New Colleges,” Ann Arbor Sun, Dec. 31, 1975, 3, 30.

140 Catherine Raftrey, “University College Phase-out Announced,” The State News (East Lansing, MI), Nov. 2, 1978, 1.

141 Lyon, “Embryo”; and Packard, “Fairhaven: Harbinger or Hostage?,” 91.

142 Freeland, Academia's Golden Age, 70.