Georgia Tech to Found Center for 21st Century Universities | College of Computing.
Comment and Review
"Ephemeralization" Follow-Up: Is the marginal benefit of college more than the cost?
Matthew Denhart and Christopher Matgouranis write on the August 19 blog of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity (CCAP):
The only way to judge the how worthwhile an investment, is to know the marginal benefits that result from it compared to its initial cost.
Based on these criteria, it is clear that the public is largely in the dark as to the value of a college degree. As we discuss in an article for Forbes.com today, colleges and universities rarely collect and publish information about the outcomes of their graduates. Perhaps this is an area where the U.S. Department of Education should step in and require alumni information be gathered and presented to the public in a clear and coherent manner. This would go lengths at providing the transparency and accountability in higher education that would benefit students and taxpayers at large.
The full text of their article can be found at Forbes.com.
In case you were wondering whether factoring value into reputational rankings of colleges and universities would change things, the answer is yes. CCAP publishes an annual ranking of undergraduate colleges based on value. The top of the list may not be a big surprise. Williams College is the top ranked institution. Princeton is second. MIT and Stanford are in the top ten. But so is Claremont McKenna College (9). Some Ivies don’t make the top fifty (Cornell is ranked number 70). Georgia Tech ends up way down the list (242), a few positions ahead of Ohio State, but well out in front of the University of Arizona (339) and the University of Minnesota (418).
Not surprisingly, the CCAP/Forbes rankings have generated heated — some might say enthusiastic — responses that either decry the irresponsibility of Forbes editors for publishing an obviously flawed ranking or agree “it’s about time..” that Middlebury (26), Bowdoin (40), and the U.S. Naval Academy (29) get the recognition they deserve. Research institutions — particularly those with high per-student expenditures — populate the bottom of the list in alarming numbers. On the other hand, student and alumni approval improves a school’s rank.
One reading of the CCAP article is that ephemeralization is overdue since American higher education seems incapable of doing more with more. I’ll let you take a look at the rankings and come to your own conclusions.
In the Basement of the Ivory Tower – Magazine – The Atlantic
I reluctantly point out this article, part of a series of stunningly arrogant and mean-spirited rants at The Atlantic about American Universities. This one is especially worrisome to me, but I would be interested in hearing what you think about it.
via In the Basement of the Ivory Tower – Magazine – The Atlantic.
Why Universities Do Research?
The title of this post is a question.
My colleague Mark Guzdial recently asked whether it makes sense for colleges and universities to do research:
I’m wondering now why universities do research — how does it make economic sense? Is it because it’s their raison d’etre? I don’t buy that, because that wouldn’t explain why so many smaller colleges and universities are increasing their research portfolio. Is it because a “hit” cancels out all the losses? One good piece of IP makes up for all the research that didn’t bear fruit? Or is it because a research portfolio is necessary for reputation surveys?
It’s a question that I try to answer in my new book. Here are some of the facts.
- University research seldom pays for itself. Institutional data is hard to come by because accounting practices vary wildly from place to place, and there is wholesale mixing of revenue sources. According to the Center for College Affordability and Productivity, for example, the historical trend at AAU institutions has been toward reduced teaching loads for faculty actively engaged in research. But that is a trend that flies in the face of increased enrollments. Additional instructors are needed for the classes that would otherwise be taught by faculty members engaged in sponsored research. Costs like these are not recoverable, so research sponsors get an effective discount because faculty salaries do not reflect teaching productivity. Who makes up the difference? Most institutions tap a general fund to cover these costs — the same fund that is used for instructional budgets. Reduced teaching loads are a tax on the cost of instruction, and it is just one of dozens of ways that cross-subsidies fund the research enterprise. I recently asked the vice president for research at a top fifty land grand college about their discount rate. He told me, “We spend $2.50 for every research dollar we bring in.“
- Institutional envy drives both behavior and investment. Presidents of public masters universities are motivated to define their institutional profiles to conform to a “higher” Carnegie classification. It is a phenomenon that Arizona State president Michael Crow calls institutional envy, and it drives the behavior of hundreds of colleges and universities. Sometimes institutional envy is simply the way that institutions climb the reputational pyramid. Other times, it is the only way to make scarce resources stretch to fit expanding missions, because non-state, non-tuition revenues flow disproportionately to the universities at the top of the hierarchy. Public support for public masters universities declined by 15% from 2001 to 2006, In that same period, tuition rose only 10%. Gifts, endowments, grants, and research contracts are the only means available for closing the gap, but private giving has been in decline since 2001. In fact, public university endowment income on a per-student basis is less than $600, which is essentially its pre-1987 level. That means federal and state research contracts have to generate enough income to keep fragile programs afloat. Since the 2008 market collapse, tuition increases have been used to try to stave off disaster, but, according the Delta Project on Postsecondary Costs, Productivity, and Analysis, few of those dollars have benefited instruction. In fact, once you remove discretionary spending, instruction is dead last among the beneficiaries of increased tuition.
- You do not need a research program to prosper and innovate. The examples that come readily to mind are Williams College and Harvey Mudd College. Williams in particular eschewed the tug of becoming a research university in the wake of Daniel Coit Gilman’s 1876 launch of Johns Hopkins as a research institution in the mold of the great German research universities. Harvey Mudd is a continuing experiment in how to keep a mission focused on students. The University of Mary Washington in Virginia innovates around technology that keeps students and alumni closely bound to the university.
- Commercializing and licensing IP is a pipe dream for most institutions. Every tech transfer office knows the examples: Wisconsin’s vitamin D patent, Stanford’s rDNA patents. But according to NSF’s John Hurt: “Of 3,200 universities, perhaps six have made significant amounts of money from their intellectual property rights.” John Preston, former head of MIT’s technology commercialization office is even more blunt: “Royalty income is such a horrible means of measuring success. Schools should instead focus on wealth and job creation, economic development, and corporate goodwill.”
- Research universities have conflicting incentives. They are in many ways inconsistent institutions. The legendary University of California president Clark Kerr used the term multiversity to describe the modern research university — it is a wonderfully clarifying word. What it means is that what we think of as monolithic institutions are actually loosely federated enterprises that all live together under the same brand. A modern research university consists of several undergraduate colleges, one or more professional schools, many graduate schools, several intercollegiate athletic programs, hospitals, hotels, performing arts centers, technology commercialization offices, and distance education centers. Each component has its own network of stakeholders who demand success, even if it comes at the expense of another part of the university.
Viewed through this lens, Guzdial’s questions are even more interesting. It frequently makes little economic sense for a university to conduct research. It may be part of the mission of a multiversity, but it is not the only mission — and there are plenty of examples to guide other choices. If the dream of IP commercialization success drives institutions to build their research programs, what about the data that predicts little chance of success? And if a university is concerned about reputational hierarchies, does building a research portfolio actually help? Among the many components of a modern multiversity, few could survive without the instructional programs. Academic programs, on the other hand, might do quite well without hospitals, theaters, or fancy football arenas. So, why should a university do research?
Let’s hear your thoughts.
A Sabbatical
I’ve been receiving email the last couple of weeks. “Where are the WWC posts?” “Are you still writing on WWC?” The short answer is “yes,” but I am taking a short sabbatical to finish my book Abelard to Apple: The Fate of American Colleges and Universities in the 21st Century. I like the idea of taking a sabbatical from writing to be able to write something, but it’s not an original idea. I noticed that when New York Times columnists like Tom Friedman and Maureen Dowd go silent for a few weeks to finish a book, they say that they are taking a sabbatical, and I thought that I would also take a sabbatical. Maybe some their marketplace magic will rub off on me.
What’s the book about? It’s a WWC story about the challenges that face American higher education as the sudden appearance of abundant choices in university education erode the value of traditional colleges and universities. I have written a little about this before. My colleague Dick Lipton has an excellent post on what he thinks is the doomsday scenario for American colleges.
The appearance of Peter Abelard’s name in the title of my book always draws curious looks. It is in part a metaphor for a long-lost approach to education in which the connection between students and teachers defined the learning experience. But it is also a real part of the story of where our universities are heading because it is the starting point of an historical arc that might well lead to Liptons’s extinction event.
Peter Abelard is known today mainly because of his disastrous love affair with Heloise, but
Few teachers ever held such sway as Abelard now did for a time. Distinguished in figure and manners, he was seen surrounded by crowds — it is said thousands — of students, drawn from all countries by the fame of his teaching, in which acuteness of thought was relieved by simplicity and grace of exposition. Enriched by the offerings of his pupils, and feasted with universal admiration, he came, as he says, to think himself the only philosopher standing the world…Great as was the influence exerted by Abelard in the minds of his contemporaries and the course of mediaeval thought, he has been little known in modern times but for his connection with Heloise[1].
Abelard to Apple will be published in 2011 by MIT Press. I will be back with new WWC posts in few weeks.
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