A steel fortune built the system that measures education in hours, not learning.
In 1905, Andrew Carnegie donated ten million dollars to create the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, an independent body chartered by Congress in 1906. The gift was meant to fund pensions for college professors, not to reshape how schools measured learning.1
The Foundation quickly discovered a problem. To distribute pensions, it needed to determine which schools qualified as genuine institutions of higher education. There were no standard definitions. The difference between a high school and a college was, in many states, unclear. Iowa State College, for instance, required students to bring a certificate of good moral character but had no uniform academic standard for admission.2
To solve this, the Foundation defined a "standard unit" of secondary education. One unit equaled 120 hours of classroom contact in a single subject, meeting four or five times per week for 40 to 60 minutes across 36 to 40 weeks. Fourteen units constituted the minimum for four years of high school preparation. Any college that adopted this standard became eligible for free faculty pensions.3
Colleges had nothing to lose and free pensions to gain. By 1910, nearly every college and secondary school in the United States was using the 120-hour standard. The Carnegie Unit had become the basic currency of American education.
In 1910, Morris Llewellyn Cooke published "Academic and Industrial Efficiency," a report underwritten by the Carnegie Foundation that applied Frederick Taylor's principles of scientific management to universities. The report introduced the "student hour" as a unit of measurement, making it possible to calculate faculty workloads and instructional costs per student.4
In a 1993 speech, Ernest Boyer, then president of the Carnegie Foundation, declared the Carnegie Unit obsolete. "I find it disturbing," he said, "that students can complete the required courses, receive a high school diploma, and still fail to gain a more coherent view of knowledge."5 As of 2024, the Foundation has launched a decade-long initiative to replace the unit with outcomes-based metrics. The standard it created to solve a pension eligibility problem in 1906 still governs how 100,000 American public schools and over 4,000 colleges structure their curricula.6