To produce the upheaval in the United States that
changed and modernized the domain of higher education from the mid-1860’s to the
mid-1880’s, three primary causes interacted. The emergence of a half-dozen
leaders in education provided the personal force that was needed. Moreover, an
outcry for a fresher, more practical, and more advanced kind of instruction
arose among the alumni and friends of nearly all of the old colleges and grew
into a movement that overrode all conservative opposition. The aggressive "Young
Yale" movement appeared, demanding partial alumni control, a more liberal
spirit, and a broader course of study. The graduates of Harvard College
simultaneously rallied to relieve the college’s poverty and demand new
enterprise. Education was pushing toward higher standards in the East by
throwing off church leadership everywhere, and in the West by finding a wider
range of studies and a new sense of public duty. The old-style
classical education received its most crushing blow in the citadel of Harvard
College, where Dr. Charles Eliot, a young captain thirty-five, son of a former
treasurer of Harvard, led the progressive forces. Five revolutionary advances
were made during the first years of Dr. Eliot’s administration. They were the
elevation and amplification of entrance requirements, the enlargement of the
curriculum and the development of the elective system, the recognition of
graduate study in the liberal arts, the raising of professional training in law,
medicine, and engineering to a postgraduate level, and the fostering of greater
maturity in student life. Standards of admission were sharply advanced in
1872-1873 and 1876-1877. By the appointment of a dean to take charge of student
affairs, and a wise handling of discipline, the undergraduates were led to
regard themselves more as young gentlemen and less as young animals. One new
course of study after another was opened up science, music, the history of the
fine arts, advanced Spanish, political economy, physic, classical philology, and
international law. According to the passage, the changes in higher education during the
later 1800’s were the result of ______.
A. plans developed by conservatives and church leaders
B. efforts of interested individuals to redefine the educational
system
C. the demands of social organizations seeding financial relief
D. rallies held by westerners wanting to compete with eastern
schools