Monday, June 29, 2026 Sign In
Books

Christopher Newfield’s ‘Great Mistake’

UC Santa Barbara Professor’s book examines wrecked public universities and how to fix them.

Christopher Newfield’s ‘Great Mistake’

Christopher Newfield’s latest book, The Great Mistake: How We Wrecked Public Universities and How We Can Fix Them, deserves to be the centerpiece of a serious, sustained public discussion about the place and function of public universities in American society. Students today find themselves in an inverted relationship: paying far more and getting far less, an arrangement that exacerbates income inequality and the viability of the American middle class.

Newfield, a professor of literature and American studies at UC Santa Barbara, has an insider’s perspective on the damage privatization has wrought in public higher education, and he makes the argument — with clear, persuasive writing and well-marshaled facts — that applying a corporate mentality to what should be a public good hasn’t worked for student learning or quality teaching.

After decades of willing cooperation from politicians, policy makers, and university administrators — including budget cuts and staggering tuition increases — public universities no longer see their mission as providing a good that produces both public and private benefits. The idea that publicly funded higher education benefits the larger society has been replaced by a belief that such education is primarily about individual economic gain.