Host Mike Palmer welcomes Kenan Sahin, the Founder and President of CAMX Power and author of American Educational Excellence: The Foundation of Our Values, Democracy, and Market Capitalism, to the podcast. We explore his educational roots as a product of California public schools and early career as an MIT professor, as well as his time leading Bell Labs as a Vice President of Technology. Kenan shares the story of the catalyst for his book, which began when he challenged an expert in the Hague who could not find enough bad words for the American system. He compares US-trained engineers to those from Europe, arguing that our system excels because it prioritizes what students do with their knowledge rather than just the depth of what they know.
The conversation then shifts to examine the fundamental values that define Americans as change-oriented societal rebels who cherish independence and choice. Kenan traces the origins of American educational excellence back to 1636 and the founding of Harvard College, as well as the 1647 law requiring towns to fund schools to protect children from being tempted by Satan. He contrasts our decentralized, coordinated network of thousands of local school districts and private colleges with centralized, state-controlled models like that of France. He also addresses the resilience of the university business model, noting that while major corporations often last only twenty years, many universities endure for centuries.
We then tackle modern challenges like rising tuition costs and look at how technology and AI are shifting the focus of learning away from facts and knowledge toward the art of asking the right questions. Kenan notes new MIT initiatives designed to train thousands of engineers at a lower cost and the role of technology in supporting special education teachers. We end with the insight that excellence requires daily improvement and that despite critiques, our system remains a global leader by preparing students for democracy and market capitalism.
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Timestamps
00:15 Intro to Kenan Sahin
01:20 Kenan’s background and MIT history
02:15 Bell Labs and the legacy of Arthur D. Little
03:55 Challenging the expert in the Hague
05:40 US engineers vs European graduates
06:55 Knowledge vs action: What you do with what you know
10:10 American values: Societal rebels and innovation
11:55 Family dynamics and the rebellion against authority
15:20 The 1636 founding of Harvard
17:15 The 1647 Tempting Satan Act
19:15 Centralized French system vs US coordinated network
20:45 University longevity and business model resilience
23:40 Tuition costs and philanthropy examples at MIT and Princeton
29:15 Quality control in the American higher education factory
31:55 Education for a lifetime vs trade schools
34:45 MIT’s new 10,000 dollar engineering initiative
36:20 AI and the importance of asking the right questions
40:40 Special education and technology assistance
43:00 Daily excellence and the spirit of philanthropy