Brazilian higher education is undergoing a multidimensional structural crisis that cannot be attributed to any single cause. Drawing on the spoken testimony of philosopher Luiz Felipe Pondé (Fundação Armando Alvares Penteado), corroborated by peer-reviewed literature, official statistics, and comparative international data, this paper diagnoses five interlocking drivers of deterioration: (i) a demographic transition that is irreversibly shrinking the pool of university-age students;(ii) the global rise of helicopter parenting and its well-documented psychological sequelae in academic settings;(iii) the persistence of functional illiteracy among undergraduates, as measured by the Indicador de Alfabetismo Funcional (INAF);(iv) the proliferation of digital counter-narratives that delegitimize formal education; and(v) the ideological capture of curriculum administration in the humanities, which displaces substantive content with partisan agendas. We argue that these drivers constitute a systemic failure rather than a conjunctural setback, reflecting the cumulative erosion of intellectual standards, institutional autonomy, and pedagogical authority. The paper concludes by proposing a five-axis reform framework oriented toward curricular renewal, pedagogical resilience training, and evidence-based quality assurance as preconditions for restoring academic legitimacy and social relevance.
Zen Revista (Wed,) studied this question.