The Wall Street Journal
For Too Many
Americans, College Today Isn't Worth It
By
GLENN
HARLAN REYNOLDS
Updated Jan. 3, 2014
8:40 p.m. ET
Stephen Webster
In the field of higher
education, reality is outrunning parody. A recent feature on the satire website
the Onion proclaimed, "30-Year-Old Has Earned $11 More Than He Would Have
Without College Education." Allowing for tuition, interest on student
loans, and four years of foregone income while in school, the fictional student
"Patrick Moorhouse" wasn't much better off. His years of stress and
study, the article japed, "have been more or less a financial wash."
"Patrick"
shouldn't feel too bad. Many college graduates would be happy to be $11 ahead
instead of thousands, or hundreds of thousands, behind. The credit-driven
higher education bubble of the past several decades has left legions of
students deep in debt without improving their job prospects. To make college a
good value again, today's parents and students need to be skeptical, frugal and
demanding. There is no single solution to what ails higher education in the
U.S., but changes are beginning to emerge, from outsourcing to online
education, and they could transform the system.
Though the GI Bill
converted college from a privilege of the rich to a middle-class expectation,
the higher education bubble really began in the 1970s, as colleges that had
expanded to serve the baby boom saw the tide of students threatening to ebb.
Congress came to the rescue with federally funded student aid, like Pell Grants
and, in vastly greater dollar amounts, student loans.
Predictably enough,
this financial assistance led colleges and universities to raise tuition and
fees to absorb the resources now available to their students. As University of
Michigan economics and finance professor Mark Perry has calculated, tuition for
all universities, public and private, increased from 1978 to 2011 at an annual
rate of 7.45%. By comparison, health-care costs increased by only 5.8%, and
housing, notwithstanding the bubble, increased at 4.3%. Family incomes, on the
other hand, barely kept up with the consumer-price index, which grew at an
annual rate of 3.8%.
For many families, the
gap between soaring tuition costs and stagnant incomes was filled by debt.
Today's average student debt of $29,400 may not sound overwhelming, but many
students, especially at private and out-of-state colleges, end up owing much more,
often more than $100,000. At the same time, four in 10 college graduates,
according to a recent Gallup study, wind up in jobs that don't require a
college degree.
Students and parents
have started to reject this unsustainable arrangement, and colleges and
universities have felt the impact. According to a recent analysis by this
newspaper, private schools are facing a long-term decline in enrollment. More
than a quarter of private institutions have suffered a drop of 10% or more—in
some cases, much more. Midway College in Kentucky is laying off around a dozen
of its 54 faculty members; Wittenberg University in Ohio is eliminating nearly
30 of about 140 full-time faculty slots; and Pine Manor College in
Massachusetts, with dorm space for 600 students but only 300 enrolled, has gone
coed in hopes of bringing in more warm bodies.
Even elite
institutions haven't been spared, as schools such as Haverford, Morehouse,
Oberlin and Wellesley have seen their credit ratings downgraded by Moody's over
doubts about the viability of their high tuition/high overhead business models.
Law schools, including Albany Law School, Brooklyn Law School and Thomas
Jefferson Law School, have also seen credit downgrades over similar doubts. And
now Democrats on Capitol Hill are pushing legislation to give colleges
"skin in the game" by clawing back federal aid money from schools
with high student-loan default rates. Expect such proposals to get traction in
2014.
America's higher
education problem calls for both wiser choices by families and better value
from schools. For some students, this will mean choosing a major carefully
(opting for a more practical area of study, like engineering over the
humanities), going to a less expensive community college or skipping college
altogether to learn a trade.
For their part,
schools must adjust to the new economic reality, as some already have. In 2011,
the University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn., cut tuition by 10%. The discount
not only increased enrollment but, ultimately, brought in more money. For
academic year 2014-15, Ashland University in Ohio has cut its tuition by
37%—more than $10,000. Faced with plummeting applications, the law schools at
George Mason, Penn State, Seton Hall and the University of Iowa have rolled
back or frozen their tuition fees.
TK
Many colleges,
according to a survey released last spring by the National Association of
College and University Business Officers, are also offering hidden discounts in
the form of increased financial aid. The survey found that for the fall of
2013, the average "tuition discount rate" for incoming freshmen (that
is, the reduction of the list price through grants and scholarships) hit an
all-time high of 45%. Such variable pricing is likely to become more widely
publicized in the future as competition for students increases and as parents
paying full tuition object to being taken advantage of.
But discounts don't
address the real problem: high costs. What's really needed in U.S. higher
education is major structural change. To remain viable, colleges and universities
need to cut expenditures dramatically. For decades, they have ridden the
student-loan gravy train, using the proceeds to build palatial buildings,
reduce faculty teaching loads and, most notably, hire armies of administrators.
Most of the growth in
higher education costs, according to a 2010 study by the Goldwater Institute, a
libertarian think tank, comes from administrative bloat, with administrative
staff growing at more than twice the rate of instructional staff. At the
University of Michigan, for example, there are 53% more administrators than
faculty, and similar ratios can be found at other institutions.
Under financial
pressure, many schools have already farmed out the teaching of classes to
low-paid adjuncts who have no job security and often no benefits.
This approach could be
extended to administration, replacing salaried employees with low-paid
"adjunct administrators" to handle routine functions. Many in the
corporate world have reaped considerable savings by outsourcing back-office
functions, and there is no reason this approach can't work in higher education.
(If U.S. News & World Report wants to improve its widely cited college
rankings, it might start by giving schools credit for leaner administration.)
Another reform that
would be useful at both public and private institutions is budget transparency.
University finances are notoriously Byzantine, and administrators generally
like it that way. But change is afoot here too.
Several years ago, the
state of Oregon launched a website, updated daily, that shows where every state
dollar is spent. The result: Anyone can see how much Oregon's higher-education
system is spending on things like travel, instruction and athletics. This is
the sort of transparency that taxpayers should demand from public universities—and
perhaps even from private universities that receive significant amounts of
public money, as nearly all do.
New instructional
methods can also contribute to cost savings. Online courses are already making
inroads, and the model makes intuitive sense for many subjects: Take the top
teachers in a field and give online access to their lectures to students at
many different colleges. There isn't a lot of one-on-one interaction in such
courses, but how much genuine interaction is there in a live 200-student
lecture class?
Once students have
acquired basic instruction in larger, less personal classes, they can apply it
in smaller advanced classes, where they would deal with faculty face to face.
This approach is already used to great effect by the popular Khan Academy, a
sophisticated not-for-profit website where primary and secondary students view
lectures at their convenience and perfect their skills through video-game-like
software. Students can then use classroom time to work through problems with
teachers and apply what they have learned. The idea is to take advantage of
mass delivery where it works best and to allow individualized attention where
it helps most.
Traditional
universities are experimenting too. The Georgia Institute of Technology is
offering an entirely online master's degree in computer science for $7,000.
This isn't a ghettoized offering from the extension school but rather, in the
words of Georgia Tech Provost Rafael Bras, "a full-service degree."
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has already put many of its courses
online; you can learn from them and even get certification, but there is no
degree attached. If MIT were to add standard exams and a diploma, its online
degree might be worth a lot—perhaps not as much as an old-fashioned MIT degree
but more than a degree from many existing bricks-and-mortar schools.
Another alternative,
already beginning to get some traction, lies in the rise of various
certification systems. A college degree is often used by employers as an
indication that its holder has a reasonable ability to read, write, show up on
time and deal with others. But many employers are unhappy with the skills that
today's graduates possess.
This has led to the
rise of certification schemes from within the higher education world, including
the Educational Testing Service's Revised Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA+)
and ACT's WorkKeys, which is explicitly aimed at employment skills.
Manufacturing companies are working with online schools and community colleges
to create "stackable certificates" that vouch for specific
competencies. Such programs may someday bypass higher education entirely,
testing and certifying people's skills regardless of how they obtained them.
But what about the
"college experience"—late-night dorm bull sessions, partying and
pizza? Won't it be ruined by these new approaches to instruction? Not
necessarily.
We may eventually see
the rise of "hoteling" for college students whose courses are done
primarily online. Build a nice campus—or buy one, from a defunct traditional
school—put in a lot of amenities, but don't bother hiring faculty: Just bring
in your courses online, with engineering from Georgia Tech, arts and literature
from Yale, business from Stanford and so on. Hire some unemployed Ph.D.s as
tutors (there will be plenty around, available at bargain-basement rates) and
offer an unbundled experience. It's a business model that just might work,
especially in geographic locations students favor. Grand Cayman is awfully nice
this time of year.
On the other hand, for
some students, avoiding the traditional campus-based college scene might be a
boon in the long run. Recent research by the sociologists Elizabeth Armstrong
of the University of Michigan and Laura Hamilton of the University of
California, Merced, points to the problem of what they call the "party
pathway." In a study they conducted among 48 female students in one
residence hall at Indiana University from 2004 to 2009, they found that young
women who were similar in terms of "predictors" (grades and test
scores) nonetheless emerged from college on very different career trajectories.
Those from more modest circumstances were often done in by their
partying-related stumbles and actually experienced downward mobility after
graduating.
None of these
alternatives to a traditional university degree is "the answer" to
the higher education bubble. And we certainly shouldn't discard entirely the
old-fashioned approach to college, whatever its shortcomings. A rigorous
liberal arts education, with an emphasis on reading carefully and writing
clearly, remains a tremendous asset, for employment as for citizenship. (The
key word here, however, is "rigorous.")
But there is no point
in trying to preserve the old regime. Today's emphasis on measuring college
education in terms of future earnings and employability may strike some as philistine,
but most students have little choice. When you could pay your way through
college by waiting tables, the idea that you should "study what interests
you" was more viable than it is today, when the cost of a four-year degree
often runs to six figures. For an 18-year-old, investing such a sum in an
education without a payoff makes no more sense than buying a Ferrari on credit.
The economist Herbert
Stein once said that if something can't go on forever, it will stop. The
pattern of the last few decades, in which higher education costs grew much
faster than incomes, with the difference made up by borrowing, can't go on
forever. As students and parents begin to apply the brakes, colleges need to
find ways to make that stop a smooth one rather than a crash.
Mr.
Reynolds is a law professor at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. This
essay is adapted from his new book, "The New School: How the Information
Age Will Save American Education From Itself," published by Encounter
Books.
No comments:
Post a Comment