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#REDIRECT ]
{{third-party|date=August 2013}}
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{{R from subtopic}}
'''Academic elitism''' is the criticism that ] or academics are prone to ]. The term "]" often carries with it an implicit critique of academic elitism.
{{R with possibilities}}

== Description ==

Economist ]'s '']'' claims that intellectuals have an undeserved "]" and are thus unfairly permitted to speak outside their expertise. In Sowell's estimation, academics respected for their contributions in their particular discipline often become known to the general public by commenting on policy issues outside that discipline.

Critics of academic elitism{{specify|date=August 2013}} argue that highly educated people tend to form an isolated social group whose views tend to be over represented among ], ]s, and other members of the ] who often draw their salary and funding from taxpayers. Economist Dan Klein shows that the worldwide top-35 economics departments pull 76 percent of their faculty from their own graduates. He argues that the academic culture is pyramidal, not ], and resembles a closed and genteel social circle. Meanwhile, he claims, academia draws on resources from taxpayers, foundations, endowments, and tuition payers, and it judges the social service delivered.{{clarify|date=August 2013}} The result is a self-organizing and self-validating circle.<ref>
{{cite journal | ref=harv
| last=Klein | first=Daniel B.
| year=2005
| title=The Ph.D. Circle in Academic Economics
| journal=Econ Journal Watch
| volume=2 | issue=1
| pages=133–148
| url=http://econjwatch.org/issues/volume-2-issue-1-april-2005
}} }}
</ref>

Another criticism{{by whom|date=August 2013}} is that universities tend more to ] than intellectualism per se; for example, academicians may be charged with over-complicating problems and expressing them in obscure language (e.g., the ], ]).

Academic elitism suggests{{clarify|date=August 2013}} that in highly competitive academic environments only those individuals who have engaged in ] are deemed to have anything worthwhile to say, or do{{attribution needed|date=August 2013}}. It suggests{{clarify|date=August 2013}} that individuals who have not engaged in such scholarship are ]. Steven Zhang of the '']'' has described the graduates of elite schools, especially those in the ], as having a "smug sense of success" because "It makes us believe gaining entrance into the Ivy League is an accomplishment unto itself."<ref>
http://cornellsun.com/node/46778
</ref>
Deeming scholarly academic discourse as the only means with which to engage in a topic has various implications in a variety of fields of study.
=== Feminist Academia ===
] is a recognized legitimate field of study in academia. Feminist academia provides the rhetoric and explanative power to build the knowledge of women’s oppression and the tools to challenge the apparent subordination. Feminist theory has a language of its own to describe the inequalities and name the many concepts and ideas that comprise the feminist theories.
==See also==
*]
*'']''
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]

==References==
{{reflist}}

* {{cite book | ref=harv
| last= Adams | first=Mike S.
| year=2004
| title=Welcome to the Ivory Tower of Babel: Confessions of a Conservative College Professor
| publisher=Harbor House
| isbn=1-891799-17-7
}}
* {{cite journal | doi=10.2466/PR0.68.3.891-894 | ref=harv
| last=Bair | first=Jeffrey H.
| last2=Boor | first2=Myron
| year=1991
| title=The Academic Elite in Law: Linkages Among Top-Ranked Law Schools
| journal=Psychological Reports
| volume=68
| pages=891–94 | issue=3
}}
* {{cite journal | ref=harv
| last=Bair | first=Jeffrey H.
| year=2003
| title=The Academic Elite in Law: Linkages Among Top-Ranked Law Schools
| journal=The American Journal of Economics and Sociology
| url=http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0254/is_2_62/ai_100202314
}}
* Keally, Charles T., "''''". Sophia International Review no. 28, 2006.{{Verify credibility|date=August 2013}}
* Lin, Xi, "''; Cynicism and disillusionment are protocol for UW elites''". The Daily of the University of Washington, 1998.{{dead link|date=August 2013}}
* Zhang, Steven, "''''". The Cornell Daily Sun, 2011.
* Newitz, Annalee (2000), "''''". Salon.com, 2000.{{dead link|date=August 2013}}
* ], "''No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the Universities''". 1986. ISBN 0-19-503557-7
*

==Further reading==
*Trow, Martin, "Problems in the Transition from Elite to Mass Education," Carnegie Commission on Higher Education, 1973 .
*

{{DEFAULTSORT:Academic Elitism}}
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