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    You are at:Home»Education»University Helped Erode Trust in Higher Ed
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    University Helped Erode Trust in Higher Ed

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtApril 18, 2026003 Mins Read
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    Maurie McInnis formed the Committee on Trust in Higher Education to do a “self-examination.”

    f11photo/iStock/Getty Images Plus

    Yale University’s president says her institution contributed to an erosion of public trust in higher ed, and she’s committed to addressing it.

    Maurie McInnis said that she formed the Committee on Trust in Higher Education last April to undertake a “thorough self-examination” into how to respond to Americans’ declining trust in universities. The committee of 10 faculty released its report last week.

    “The committee calls on Yale to reflect on and take responsibility for our role in the erosion of public trust,” McInnis said Wednesday in a lengthy statement on the report. “I accept this judgment fully. This decline did not come out of nowhere, nor did it happen overnight. And we were certainly more than mere bystanders.”

    But some recent polls show that Americans’ trust in higher ed has grown since 2023, though they reveal a partisan chasm in the level of trust. A Vanderbilt Project on Unity and American Democracy survey published in September found that 69 percent of Democrats said they were confident in higher ed, compared to 35 percent of Republicans and 24 percent of respondents who identify with President Trump’s Make America Great Again movement.

    The Yale committee’s report includes 20 recommendations, though it’s unclear whether the university will implement all of them.

    Among the recommendations: Allow more students to attend Yale tuition-free. The university already allows undergraduates from families that make less than $200,000 annually to pay no tuition, and the committee recommended that “Yale, over time, substantially raise the income limit on the ‘no tuition’ guarantee.” But the panel didn’t agree with calls to make the university totally tuition-free.

    “Eliminating tuition would increase Yale’s dependence on the federal government and on a limited number of large donors, raising the potential for additional problems of undue influence, suspicion, and mistrust,” the committee wrote. “The goal is not to make Yale free, but to make it affordable.”

    In undergraduate admissions, the group recommended that the university “reduce preferences for special classes of applicants.” It wrote, “The current system of preferences for certain groups of applicants (including varsity athletes, legacies, and children of faculty, staff, and donors) distorts the admissions process by reducing the number of slots available to high-achieving applicants who do not fit into one of the favored categories.”

    The group also suggested “making public a minimum standard of academic achievement necessary for consideration … such as a minimum SAT score or a Yale-specific entrance exam.”

    In apparent response to criticisms of ideological and political conformity, the committee also said each department and school should examine “the breadth of its intellectual and methodological commitments; the range of scholarly approaches represented on its faculty; the diversity of perspectives in its curriculum; and the openness of its hiring and admissions practices to dissenting or underrepresented traditions.” To “guard against insularity,” these studies “should incorporate input from students and faculty outside” the school or department, the group wrote.

    The committee also recommended putting course percentiles on students’ transcripts to combat grade inflation, creating a “civic education initiative” that would reach all first-year students and making computer- and phone-free classrooms the “default”—while still allowing exceptions for students who need accommodations and for individual faculty members who have compelling reasons to allow devices.

    Erode Helped Higher Trust University
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