Thursday, October 28, 2010

Links for 10/28/10

Eric Hanushek
New York City's schools chancellor, with the support of Mayor Bloomberg, wants to release the value-added test score results for 12,000 teachers…

I've spent many years looking carefully at such data. I know it can be incendiary; I know it has flaws. Still, I strongly support its release.

Two principles lie behind this view. First, parents and taxpayers have a basic right to know about the effectiveness of the teachers and schools that they support. Second, it is impossible to think of improving our schools without focusing on the productivity of the teachers.
Value-added analysis is the best tool we have available to zero in on the impact of the individual teacher on student achievement gains. Using it, we can begin to distinguish between the best teachers and the worst, so we can begin rewarding the best while learning from their successes and improving - or removing - the worst…
Thomas H. Benton
the message was that a large segment of the population thinks humanities professors are a bunch of left-wing elitists who hate America, are overpaid, underworked, focused on pointless research, and unwilling to teach undergraduates…

I think I understand why many people who feel coerced into attending college at great expense, while still being potentially shut out from economic opportunity, might resent those for whom an elevated social position seems to have come as a matter of course. People resent professors even more when they seem to attack the institutions that give people's lives meaning, such as the military, the church, and the traditional family. Denouncing any of those things from behind the shield of tenure and potentially at taxpayer expense is offensive to most Americans…

Far from being a leisure class, most college teachers are sharing the economic stresses faced by millions of other displaced, downsized, and outsourced workers who see no relief on the horizon…
Douglas W. Texter
Lisa Chavez, the dominatrix of the University of New Mexico… has simply made public what anyone who has spent time in an English department already knew: These departments, modeled on medieval institutions and traditions, are inherently sadomasochistic…
STEPHANIE SIMON And STEPHANIE BANCHERO
"For years and years, universities got away with, 'Trust us—it'll be worth it,'" said F. King Alexander, president of California State University at Long Beach.

But no more: "Every conversation we have with these institutions now revolves around productivity,"…
A funny (to some) comic.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Chart of the Week: The Increase in Undergraduates Receiving Federal Loans

This week we take a look at what has happened to the number of undergraduate students receiving federal Stafford loan aid between 1999 and 2009. We see that the number of annual recipients increased by 75 percent during this time, going from 4.15 million just over a decade ago to nearly 7.3 million students last year, an indication that students are relying more and more on federal loan programs to pay for college.

Links for 10/27/10

Rick Hess
New York City teachers are also eligible for a voluntary tax-deferred annuity retirement program. That plan for many years guaranteed teachers at least an 8.25% rate of return on investments, with the city committed to fully honoring the rate if the market didn't deliver...

he major difference from Madoff's scheme is that the UFT can always count on NYC to raid the schools in order to make good on its unaffordable promises...

It'll be fascinating to see if the NEA and AFT leaders so eager to declare that they're just fighting "for the kids" will continue to press for "victories" that reduce instructional time, teacher preparation days, and school budgets as the price for trimming their supersized, industrial-era benefits.
DAVE MARCUS
I secretly hoped my son would go to one of those Ivy campuses. Maybe I saw that as the seal of approval for my parenting…
Tim Ranzetta
The total disbursements for Stafford, Parent PLUS and GradPLUS loans for the 2009-10 academic year came to almost $96 billion… a 12.5% increase…
Linda Suskie
The arguments against doing assessment — and the hope of some that this is a fad that will go away soon — are fading…

Too many of us are separating work on assessment from work on improving teaching and learning, when they should be two sides of the same coin…
Much of the higher education community has no real incentive to change how we help students learn. And if there's little incentive to change or be innovative, there’s little reason to assess how well we're keeping our promises…

Big chunks of society no longer trust government, financial institutions, charities. So it shouldn’t be surprising that some government policymakers and employers don’t trust us to provide an appropriately rigorous education. And we don’t always trust one another, such as when students are transferring between colleges.

So the days of saying student work is good or bad based solely on our own private judgment are over. Today we need externally informed targets or standards that we can justify as appropriately rigorous…

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Who's Really Lying to Students?

By Jonathan Robe

Over the past year, for-profit colleges have come under heavy fire, with many within higher education circles and the government criticizing them for a number of things related to the quality of education the for-profits offer to their students. Some, including the GAO, have even gone so far as to accuse the for-profits of lies, deception, and even outright fraud (if you want to see more examples, go here and here and here and here). These accusations, despite the heated rhetoric, are not necessarily wholly without merit. Have for-profit colleges encouraged students to enroll who are ill-prepared both for collegiate study and good employment? Undoubtedly. Have there been instances of misleading advertising by for-profits? Yes. Do for-profits rely too heavily on federal aid dollars for their revenues? Perhaps. But does all of this mean that the entire for-profit sector is dubious? Certainly not, as this recent CCAP report details.

The problem with this focus on for-profits is not that there are no flaws within the for-profit sector. Rather, the problem is that most, if not all, of the charges leveled at for-profits can also be leveled at almost any institution of higher education in the United States today, a point that was driven home in a recent panel discussion at the Heritage Foundation in which CCAP’s Richard Vedder participated. The reality is that, whether the school in question is Corinthian Colleges, the University of Texas at El Paso, the University of Michigan, or Cornell University, students are overburdened with debt, many graduates face poor employment prospects (not all of which are due to the sour economic climate), schools rely heavily on government payments, and accountability is lacking in terms of what students really learn while in college. Many schools perpetuate what Chad Adleman calls "The Old College Lie" by enrolling students known to be ill-prepared for college.

However, even recognizing the wide-spread nature of educational malfeasance misses what may be the most important point: namely, the federal government’s complicity in misleading students by understating the costs and exaggerating the benefits of higher education. After all, it is the Department of Education itself which classifies student loans, along with grants and work-study, as “aid.” But there is a fundamental distinction between grants (which don’t have to be repaid) and loans (which do, with interest). Of course, because some of the loans are subsidized by taxpayers (by delayed repayment, below-market interest rates, etc.), classifying these loans as “aid” is not a complete lie. It is, however, deeply misleading to students by giving them an incorrect picture of the true cost of their college education.

Let me use a little anecdote to illustrate this problem. One of my college friends several years ago told me how he used excess financial aid in his student account to pay for a summer trip to Europe. It wasn’t until sometime later that it dawned on me, then a naïve sophomore, that what he called “aid” was really excess student loans. This same friend graduated a year or so later and promptly got a position working at McDonald's and, for obvious reasons, began to worry about his financial outlook. He has since moved on, though the current reality of his debt burden is far from fictitious.

Now I’m not claiming that my friend is not responsible for making poor financial decisions, nor am I claiming that his experience is necessarily typical for all students, nor that taking student loans out by anyone is unjustified. Instead, I use this anecdote to illustrate how our common practice to categorize student loans as aid can lead students financially astray. I therefore partially sympathize with students who, after several years in school, come to the sudden realization of how much debt they truly have. While in many (perhaps all) cases they really should have known what they were getting into in the first place, the ED isn’t doing that much to help by continuing the mis-characterization of the nature of student loans. It’s almost like a used car salesman selling cars by convincing his customers that if they take out loans to pay for their cars, they are lowering the cost of the purchases. Of course buyers in this instance will have distorted views of the true costs, just like students who view loans as just another form of aid.

In the final analysis, the ED itself may not be misleading students, but it sure is aiding and abetting those who do. Students confused about the nature of financial aid are particularly susceptible to claims by higher education advocacy groups that, by taking out loans, students can reduce the net price they pay for college. It’s also the schools themselves who, as Edububble noted, manipulate the debt statistics by redistributing loan burdens from students to parents, with the result that the debt doesn’t show up as “student” loans. If we are ever to see real reductions in college costs, the government and colleges have to upfront and honest with students about the full extent of college costs and that, at the end of the day, somebody has to pay the whole bill.

Links for 10/26/10

Project on Student Debt
We estimate that college seniors who graduated in 2009 carried an average of $24,000 in student loan debt, up six percent from the previous year…
Jason Delisle
If tax credits are more difficult to deliver than grant aid or loan subsidies, why does Congress continue to create them for higher education expenses? There are two main reasons. First, grant aid and loan programs, unlike tax benefits, show up in the budget as spending. As such, they are highly visible, subject to intense scrutiny, and must compete with other priorities in the budget process. This isn’t the case for tax benefits. That makes it easier – in the political sense – for lawmakers to deliver assistance through the tax code rather than direct grant aid. In other words, tax benefits don’t look like spending and therefore win more support from lawmakers. But from a true budget perspective, tax benefits and grants have the same effect.

That leads to the second reason why Congress and the president like to enact tax credits instead of “spending programs”. Tax benefits can be doled out to more affluent families with surprisingly little opposition, but a grant program targeting the same income groups with the same amount of aid would never fly…
JULIA WERDIGIER
Ashmount is one of three state schools in Britain that decided to outsource part of their teaching to India via the Internet. The service — the first of its kind in Europe — is offered by BrightSpark Education, a London-based company set up last year. BrightSpark employs and trains 100 teachers in India and puts them in touch with pupils in Britain through an interactive online tutoring program.

The feedback from pupils, the schools and parents is good so far…

Tutors are being paid £7 an hour, more than double the minimum wage in Punjab…
Paige Chapman, David Glenn, Jennifer Howard, Audrey Williams June, and Travis Kaya
Following word that the state faces a budget gap of up to $500-million in the 2012 fiscal year, Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat, ordered the Department of Higher Education to conduct a statewide review of all academic programs at public institutions.

As a result, on October 1, the provost of the University of Missouri at Columbia, Brian L. Foster, released a list of 75 "underperforming" degree programs being considered for potential realignment or elimination. The threatened programs had awarded an average of fewer than 10 undergraduate, five master's, or three doctoral degrees in the past three years. Most programs on the list are graduate programs…

"People are walking around saying, 'Mine is the essential program on campus that can't be cut,' but they're secretly fearing that their program will be the one,"…

Monday, October 25, 2010

Why Did 17 Million Students Go to College?

Two sets of information were presented to me in the last 24 hours that have dramatically reinforced my feeling that diminishing returns have set in to investments in higher education, with increasing evidence suggesting that we are in one respect “overinvesting” in the field. First, following up on information provided by former student Douglas Himes at the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), my sidekick Chris Matgouranis showed me the table reproduced below (And for more see this).

Over 317,000 waiters and waitresses have college degrees (over 8,000 of them have doctoral or professional degrees), along with over 80,000 bartenders, and over 18,000 parking lot attendants. All told, some 17,000,000 Americans with college degrees are doing jobs that the BLS says require less than the skill levels associated with a bachelor’s degree.


Occupation
Number with at least a Bachelor’s
Percentage
Customer service representatives
482,784
21.62
Waiters and waitresses
317,759
13.40
Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive
311,440
16.64
Executive secretaries and administrative assistants
243,131
16.64
Receptionists and information clerks
141,476
12.89
Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand
118,441
5.07
Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners
107,457
5.01
Truck drivers, heavy and tractor-trailer
85,205
5.09
Bartenders
80,542
16.00
Carpenters
65,412
7.27
Food preparation workers
63,737
7.24
Amusement and recreation attendants
63,704
24.61
Landscaping and groundskeeping workers
62,414
6.77
Construction laborers
59,409
5.82
Telemarketers
54,713
15.85
Postal service mail carriers
49,452
13.95
Electrician
49,109
7.76
Hotel, motel, and resort desk clerks
37,156
16.14
Flight attendants
29,645
29.80
Parking lot attendants
18,749
13.74

I have long been a proponent of Charles Murray’s thesis that an increasing number of people attending college do not have the cognitive abilities or other attributes usually necessary for success at higher levels of learning. As more and more try to attend colleges, either college degrees will be watered down (something already happening I suspect) or drop-out rates will rise.

The relentless claims of the Obama administration and others that having more college graduates is necessary for continued economic leadership is incompatible with this view. Putting issues of student abilities aside, the growing disconnect between labor market realities and the propaganda of higher-education apologists is causing more and more people to graduate and take menial jobs or no job at all. This is even true at the doctoral and professional level—there are 5,057 janitors in the U.S. with Ph.D.’s, other doctorates, or professional degrees.

This week an extraordinarily interesting new study was posted on the Web site of America’s most prestigious economic-research organization, the National Bureau of Economic Research. Three highly regarded economists (one of whom has won the Nobel Prize in Economic Science) have produced “Estimating Marginal Returns in Education,” Working Paper 16474 of the NBER. After very sophisticated and elaborate analysis, the authors conclude “In general, marginal and average returns to college are not the same.” (p. 28)
In other words, even if on average, an investment in higher education yields a good, say 10 percent, rate of return, it does not follow that adding to existing investments will yield that return, partly for reasons outlined above. The authors (Pedro Carneiro, James Heckman, and Edward Vytlacil) make that point explicitly, stating “Some marginal expansions of schooling produce gains that are well below average returns, in general agreement with the analysis of Charles Murray.” (p.29)

Now it is true that college has a consumption as well as investment function. People often enjoy going to classes, just as they enjoy watching movies or taking trips. They love the socialization dimensions of schooling—particularly in this age of the country-clubization of American universities. They may improve their self-esteem by earning a college degree. Yet, at a time when resources are scarce, when American governments are running $1.3-trillion deficits, when we face huge unfunded liabilities associated with commitments made to our growing elderly population, should we be subsidizing increasingly problematic educational programs for students whose prior academic record would suggest little likelihood of academic, much less vocational, success?

I think the American people understand, albeit dimly, the logic above. Increasingly, state governments are cutting back  higher-education funding, thinking it is an activity that largely confers private benefits. The pleas of university leaders and governmental officials for more and more college attendance appear to be increasingly costly and unproductive forms of special pleading by a sector that abhors transparency and performance measures.

Higher education is on the brink of big change, like it or not.

Christopher Matgouranis helped enormously in preparing this posting.

Links for 10/25/10

Timothy Henderson
Our country is rearing a group of intelligent young men and women with lots of skills and enthusiasm but little self-knowledge. Unable or unwilling to deviate from the script during childhood and college, we have shifted to early adulthood the self-exploration that used to occur earlier in life and used to be the purpose of a liberal arts education. The resulting economic, psychological, and social strain on parents and kids is tremendous.
Only by breaking down the rigid structure of the middle-class American childhood can this situation be rectified. Children’s lives must cease to be packed with extracurricular activities, sports leagues, music lessons, and innumerable other résumé-building pursuits…

Patrick Wolf

As John Chubb and Terry Moe originally argued in Politics, Markets, and America’s Schools, a problem with education policy set by local experts through political bodies like school boards is that everyone has their own educational hobby-horse. Each contributor to policy making will insist that their pet program get adopted. The result is a curriculum like the Mountain of a Man — massive, bloated, and utterly lacking in discernment. Eventually something has to give…

Edububble

The University of Pennsylvania continues to claim that they’ve got a no loan policy at the same time as publishing a set of six case studies where four– count ‘em– four boil down to the parents taking out a loan...

Peter Meyer

For years I have watched schools react to social problems – or be made to react to them by misguided policymakers and legislators – by instituting a special class on it. Columbine unleashed a wave of Codes of Conduct. Drugs lead to DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education). Gangs give rise to anti-gang education programs. We are now on the cusp of a wave of anti-bullying curricula, books, teachers guides. My favorite, however, has been the reaction to obesity: a PE curriculum, with texts to read and tests to take, but no physical exercise...

Richard Vedder Speaking at University of Michigan

On Thursday, November 18, 2010, Richard Vedder will be participating in a panel discussion on for-profit higher education. The panel is hosted by The Center for Local, State, and Urban Policy and the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan.

For more details about this event, please go here.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Sticker Price Really Does Matter

by Jonathan Robe

Last week economist Peter Sacks had a couple of essays published by MindingtheCampus (you can find them here and here) arguing that the "published prices [i.e. "sticker prices"] of higher education are virtually meaningless" and that the "far more important number is net price, which is the cost of attendance (tuition sticker price plus expenses) less federal, state and, especially, institutional grants."

On this count, Sacks is mistaken, and there are several reasons why. First of all, in his analysis of published vs. net price, he ignores the fact that a significant number of students don't receive any type of financial aid at all, whether it is in the form of grants, loans or work study. According to the NCES, only 79.5% of full-time full-year students receive any type of aid (and only 80.7% of students from families making less than $20,000 in income). For 20% of all full-time full-year students, the sticker price is all there is when it comes to paying for college.

Second, the net price figures Sacks cites in his essays are discounted by both grants and loans. But students are, ultimately, responsible for repaying any loan aid they received; they just have a time delay between the time they get the educational service and the time they have to pay. For some students, the debt they accumulate in order to attend college can be quite crushing. Students from the most affluent families don't need to take on debt to pay for college, so the people most likely to take out the large student loans would be those from families with more limited--but not negligible--financial resources. In order to make a more accurate assessment of the costs born by students, we need to look at the percentage of students receiving non-loan aid: at Harvard, fully 30% of all undergrads either have to pay the full sticker price now or take out loans to cover the cost of their college education. At Stanford, that number is 27%, at Columbia it is 53%, at Yale it's 46%. Thus, even at the most elite and expensive schools, thousands of students still have to cover the entire cost of college.

Third, it is a bit misleading to refer to Harvard's current level of financial support for low-income students as "generous." If Harvard or Yale or Princeton wanted to do low-income students a real favor, they would give them full-tuition discounts. Given their vast multi-billion dollar endowments (the GDP of some European countries is dwarfed by the combined endowments of Harvard, Yale and Princeton), anything less than full-tuition discounts really amounts to these schools getting as much money from their students as they can. Sacks indirectly acknowledges this when he notes, towards the end of his first essay, that the percentage of students with Pell Grants at some of the most elite schools is appallingly low (this is true, by the way, even of public universities as well, such as the University of Virginia). In fact, if schools such as Harvard and Yale were really serious about making tuition affordable, they could use their endowment wealth to give all but the very richest undergrads full-tuition scholarships.

Fourth, as my colleague Matthew Denhart has pointed out to me, when high school students and their families are comparing costs between schools, they look at the sticker prices precisely because they don't know in advance the exact amount of aid, if any, they will receive. In fact, how much financial aid a particular student receives often isn't known until after they are admitted to a particular institution and possibly even after the student has committed to attending. Furthermore, just because an incoming freshman has received a relatively large aid package for the first year doesn't mean that that student will have as much aid available for the second, third, and fourth years. Students can "lose" merit aid (if their grades don't meet the minimum level required for a particular scholarship) and even need-based aid (if their families move into a higher income bracket, for instance). In either of these cases, the cost born by students draws closer to the full sticker price.

Finally, the true marginal cost for providing a college education to an additional student is the sticker price, not net price. Even if the student doesn't have to pay the full sticker price, someone else has to pick up the rest of the tab, whether parents, other family members, taxpayers or other third parties. Looking at just net price is misleading because we can't ignore the fact that the tuition bill has to be paid in full. One of the main reasons tuition has skyrocketed in recent decades is that third parties foot so much of the bill. If college is to be made more affordable, the payment structure ought to be restructured so that consumers are more cost-conscious and in a position to spend their dollars elsewhere if colleges and universities fail to control costs.

Of course, this is not to say that looking at net price is totally illegitimate. Indeed, there is a limited usefulness in looking at net tuition, but we have to keep any analysis of net tuition within those limits, recognizing that, when it is all said and done, the full sticker price is in fact paid into the university coffers. Unless we first start with that acknowledgment, any discussion of college costs will go awry.

Chart of the Week: Degrees, Unemployment and Population

The number of degrees conferred (bachelor's, master's and doctoral/professional) more than doubled between 1970 and 2008. However, the unemployment rate of these individuals exactly doubled during this time. Both of these increases were far greater than the overall rate of population growth for the United States. In light of this evidence, one must question the sensibility of policy goals that seek to substantially further increase the proportion of Americans with college degrees.(Update: It has been brought to our attention that this sentence can be easily mis-interpreted; thus, we have decided to simply delete it to avoid any further confusion.)




For past Charts of the Week: Visit the CCAP Website, here.

Links for 10/21/10

Brian Tamanaha on “The Irresponsibility of Law Schools


Toby N. Carlson
The failure rate for proposals submitted by academic scientists has reached such high levels that many professors must spend virtually all their time writing proposals, leaving the creative thinking to graduate students and postdoctoral associates. The result is science by proxy…

under such pressure, must neglect their teaching (and most everything else) in their frantic search for research funds. Not surprisingly, the exponentially increasing numbers of proposals are of declining quality…

Often, an agency's request for proposal, or RFP, reads like a legal document, constricting the applicant to stay within very narrow and conventional bounds, with no profound scientific questions posed at all. Many RFP's are so overly specific that they amount to little more than work for hire…


a lack of funds is not the problem…

Robert B. Archibald and David H. Feldman

most of those who write on higher education start from the proposition that the causes of rising college cost are to be found by examining higher education with a fine-toothed comb. What they find isn’t pretty. They see dysfunctional universities in an increasingly dysfunctional higher education system…


the most important drivers of college cost are the technological forces that have reshaped the entire American economy…


We take the dysfunction narrative seriously. Some of its arguments hold together as coherent stories, while others fall apart when probed more deeply. Yet taken together, the dysfunction arguments fail to explain the data on college cost and price nearly as well as simpler and more general arguments that flow from our aerial view…

Arnold Kling

There is a chicken-and-egg problem with cost-disease stories. That is, do we subsidize health care and education because their costs are rising relative to other good? Or are their costs rising because we subsidize them?


As you know, I think that credentials bottlenecks are at the root of much evil here. What if it were easier for a non-accredited university to compete? What if it were easier for an accredited university to fail? Why are some careers (I'll use my favorite example, physical therapy) only available via a classroom path rather than an apprenticeship path?


I think that if the problem were just that college education uses a highly-educated labor force that is in limited supply, we would see different economic behavior. When you have a scarce resource, you try not to waste it. But it seems to me that professors waste most of their time engaged in status competition, meaning the attempt to publish.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

The Inmates Running the Asylum?

That's the title of the brand new CCAP report, released today, on the topic of higher education accreditation in America today. According to this report, authored by Andrew Gillen, Daniel Bennett and Richard Vedder, the current system is "broken" because it is

mired in secrecy, delivers imprecise and largely unhelpful information, is clouded by possible currents of self-interest, restricts entrepreneurial initiative, is often costly to administer when all costs are considered, and is not sufficiently outcomes based. It does a poor job of conveying important information to those funding it, including the customers themselves (students) as well as major donors (governments, private philanthropists). Its relevance as a quality control and enhancement device is at best marginal.

Although accreditation may appear to be a well-designed system on paper, as lead author Andrew Gillen notes for MindingtheCampus, it "accomplishes almost none of what it is supposed to."

You can read the Chronicle's article on this report here or you can download the report in its entirety from our website.

Links for 10/20/10

EduBubble on what to do about college costs.

Steve Kolowich
good course design and good game design are based on the same factors: fair rules, clear goals, fair rules, and strong incentives to learn from errors and develop the knowledge and skills necessary to be successful. Judging by how many students choose games over coursework, it would appear course designers might have something to learn from game designers…

Most courses, she said, are taught in chunks that only make sense to students in retrospect. In a game, the skills are learned in a context that makes them seem less discrete and more like intuitive steps toward an explicit goal…
Don Troop
Eastern Michigan University gave Sam Fanning a degree in network and information-technology administration last December. A month later, after he couldn't find work, it gave him a job as a custodian in the student center.

Mr. Fanning feels fortunate to be working in a unionized job with benefits. As he toils to make monthly $500 payments on his student loan…

I don't feel incompetent. I just feel like my potential isn't being used.
Dean Dad
I stand in awe of Stanley Fish’s ability to maintain a prominent and successful career without ever, even by accident, getting anything right. It’s an astonishing record, really. He’s the David Hasselhoff of academia; nobody can really explain why he’s still there, yet he’s still there…

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Why Do We Have HBCU’s?

Jason Riley is a great writer, and both he and his wife Naomi (who is writing a book on tenure) have interesting and often provocative things to say, such as in Jason’s great recent book on American immigration. Now Jason has stirred things up a bit with his Wall Street Journal piece that argues that historically black colleges and universities (hereafter, HBCU’s) are serving black students very poorly, and have become something of an expensive, ineffective anachronism. This has stirred up some anger, and Michael Sorrell, writing with Marybeth Gasman, has used this blog series to argue that Riley is misinformed, inaccurate, etc., etc. Sorrell, by the way, is president of an extremely small black college in Dallas that once achieved something very difficult to accomplish in higher education: it managed to almost lose its accreditation.

Ms. Gasman and Mr. Sorrell say the evidence shows Jason Riley is wrong. I disagree, but even before we get to the evidence, I find the idea of race-based institutions of higher education very disturbing in this day and age. It is interesting that most schools use the cry for “diversity” to justify their racially preferential policies that are designed to reduce racial homogeneity in the student body, arguing there are social if not educational benefits to having more racially mixed student bodies. Yet at the same time we are subsidizing and promoting institutions that celebrate homogeneity–arguing that black self-esteem is enhanced when students are educated in largely segregated schools with other blacks (think of the hue and cry if someone tried to establish an institution designed explicitly to serve white persons or even Asians.) In a nation where there is a black president elected largely with white votes, where blacks are found with increasing frequency as Secretary of State, in Congress, as leading entertainers and sports figures, and as CEO’s of prestigious companies like American Express, do we really need to have HBCU’s? Indeed, isn’t this short of a embarrassment to our nation that prides itself on equality of opportunity and where success historically has been largely based on meritorious achievement and, as Martin Luther King so memorably said, on “the content of your character”?

But enough opinion. How good are the HBCU’s? One way to evaluate this is to look at rankings. I suspect the Harvard, Yale and Princeton of the HBCU’s are Howard, Spelman, and Morehouse. In the US News & World Report rankings, the top-ranked liberal arts college, Spelman is ranked 59th, which is pretty good but hardly one of the best. Howard, the top HBCU research university, does not crack the top 100 in that list. Not one school is considered a very fine school of the highest distinction. In the Forbes rankings (full disclosure: I am in charge of compiling them), there are some 610 schools ranked, and not one the HBCU’s makes the top half of that list. The best of the HBCU’s are considered to be fairly decent but hardly superb institutions. Taken collectively, the 95 or so four year domestic HBCU’s have typical six year graduate rates around one-third, compared with well over 50 percent for the general population of schools. For every student entering one of these schools full time who successfully graduates (albeit in as much as six years), two others drop out. Lists of the lowest graduation rate schools in the country have disproportionately high representation from the HBCU’s.

Proponents of HBCU’s would say the low indicators of performance of those schools arises from the fact that students, on average, have lower incomes and poor academic backgrounds than non-HBCU schools–which is true. Some limited empirical analysis that we have done at the Center for College Affordability and Productivity suggests that this may explain much, but not all, of the relatively poor graduation rates. Even if it explains all of the differential rates, however, it only means that HBCU’s are no better nor worse than other schools, hardly a justification for continuation of race-centered institutions.

Another issue relates to the amount of subsidies. Howard gets about $235-million from the federal government annually, or roughly $22,225 per student. Most traditional state universities are lucky to get per student subsidies of half that amount, and one-quarter is closer to typical. Would the students be better off if we gave them $22,225 vouchers to attend traditional universities ranked higher than Howard in the rankings? I suspect so. It is time to rethink the public funding of this anachronism from the past.

I am not proposing simply abolishing these institutions. I simply would suggest that they should not receive special funding because of some race-based status, and that they should accordingly be encouraged to enroll more non-black students. Already some HBCU’s, notably two in West Virginia, are in fact no longer predominantly black. Just as all-male bastions like Harvard and Yale started accepting women quite successfully 40 years ago, so I suspect the HBCU’s would benefit from expanding their client base.

*This blog post was originally published as part of the "Innovations" blog series at The Chronicle of Higher Education

Links for 10/19/10

William Creeley
Attention, college administrators: Attempting to defend your institution's unconstitutional speech code in court is very, very expensive…
Will Fitzhugh
the state is now paying for high school twice. The students have to learn to do in college what they should have learned to do in the high schools…

everyone but students is imagined to be responsible for student academic work. As Paul Zoch has so regularly pointed out, the message that sends down the line to students is that their job is to get through high school with a minimum of work, while it is someone else's responsibility to educate them…
Dan Edelstein
universities in fact bear a considerable responsibility for the brain drain away from the humanities. By raising the cost of education to stratospheric levels, we oblige students to seek a higher return on their investment. It is this sort of economic calculation, I suggest, and not some alleged generational change, that is driving students in droves towards preprofessional degrees…

the cost of an education can act as a filter for intellectual choices. Students will be far less willing to take risks when they’re paying a fortune to enroll. It’s not the zeitgeist: it’s common sense...
Lior Shamir
biomedical research is endangered by its precarious position atop a bubble of unsustainable financial practices…

One solution is to change the NIH's grant-making policy to require that a principal investigator's salary—or at least a substantial part of it—be paid for by the investigator's home institution. The National Science Foundation has already adopted such a policy…

universities and research institutions, if forced to bear the financial burden of hiring and paying investigators themselves, would plan their hiring strategies far more carefully… That extra consideration, in turn, would ensure a better balance between the aspirations of universities and research institutions, and the ability of the NIH to subsidize those ambitions…

Monday, October 18, 2010

Do Colleges Need French Departments?

That's the topic of discussion for the most recent "Room for Debate" forum at The New York Times. You can read Richard Vedder's contribution here. An excerpt:
For far too long, universities have merely added new programs in areas of rising demand to existing programs, burdening students, taxpayers and donors with the added cost. As resources tighten and that luxury no longer is available, universities need to do what businesses routinely do – reinvent what they do to meet the changing needs of society.

The Underemployed College Graduate

This page has moved to http://centerforcollegeaffordability.org/archives/1761.


By: Christopher Matgouranis

After reluctantly agreeing to help my sister move into her college apartment, I was given the duty of getting the cable set-up. As it was required that I be present while the cable company representative installed the cables, we engaged in some small talk while he worked. It turns out that he attended my university and had actually taken many of the same classes that I have. This individual had graduated with a bachelor’s degree several years prior but was now just setting up cable television for college students. This is just one of the many anecdotes about underemployed college graduates. Do any data exist to suggest that, rather than just an anecdote, such underemployment is a systemic problem?

The Bureau of Labor Statistics keeps a superb data base of educational attainment levels by occupation, publishing detailed attainment data for well over 700 professions. But what does this data show? Overwhelmingly this dataset supports the anecdotal evidence that there are legions of underemployed college graduates. The table below highlights just a few of the examples, showing the percentage of workers in a given profession who possess at least a bachelor's degree.

Profession Proportion with a College Degree
Flight attendants 29.8%
Retail salespersons 24.5%
Customer service representatives 21.6%
Baggage porters and bellhops 17.4%
Secretaries (not legal/medical/executive) 16.6%
Hotel, motel, and resort desk clerks 16.1%
Telemarketers 15.8%
Taxi drivers and chauffeurs 15.2%
Manicurists and pedicurists 11.5%
Shampooers 11.5%
Locksmiths and safe repairers 10.2%
Telecomm. installers & repairers 13.1%


Other examples include the aforementioned mail carriers, of whom 13.9 percent have at least a bachelor’s degree. It is quite unlikely that the sociology or humanities classes these individuals took in college are making them more proficient at delivering the mail. 24.1 percent of all food service managers hold a bachelor’s degree, while an additional 3.1 percent have a master’s degree. Is a college degree requisite for running a restaurant, say McDonald’s or Friday’s? Probably not.

This is basic empirical evidence that we have produced too many college graduates. The promise of a bachelor’s degree falls short when people end up doing things that they could have done without attending college. It is very likely that many college grads did not attend college with the dream of becoming a shampooer. Further evidence against the bachelor’s, the unemployment rate of college graduates, currently at 4.4 percent (higher than the historical average), is not as high as the overall rate, but indicates that the bachelor’s degree is not a guaranteed path to a cushy middle class life-style.

When considering public policy aimed at increasing the percentage of college graduates in the labor force, it must be an imperative to consider what these people will be doing after graduation. Is it socially responsible for us to encourage individuals to enroll in college and accumulate massive debt when the benefits are becoming increasingly uncertain? I think not. An increase in the overall percentage of college graduates will just see that more will end up underemployed (or unemployed altogether).

This increase will also place an upward pressure on credential inflation. Employers currently require college degrees for jobs that really do not warrant one. For example, a quick search of monster.com will show that for many jobs, such as an office clerk or administrative assistant, a college degree is preferred or even required, when the work entails tasks that high school/ vocational grads could easily handle. This problem will only be exacerbated if the norm moves more towards holding a college degree. It may be a laudable goal to increase the amount of college graduates in the work force, but it is truly misguided. Society would be better served if it instead focused its resources towards vocational educations and certifications, a less costly and more effective alternative.