Even if these things are mostly "obvious", it's good to hear them said and it's good that it's in something other than, say, the Chronicle of Higher Ed. But he draws some odd conclusions from his supply-and-demand argument. People grumble about the high cost as if it's greedy, overpaid professors (sometimes explicitly blaming tenure), but many if not most could make a lot more money elsewhere. I hold a PhD in computer science, have been teaching computer science at a four-year college (non-US read: "small undergraduate university") for 7 years, and my salary is $52,000 a year. I don't need to tell anyone here that I could make a lot more than that working in industry.
It's plenty to live by and I have no complaints, because I'm certainly not in it for the money; I'm stating an actual number because I want to be quite clear that tuition rates that have gone up faster than inflation for most of my lifetime are not due to professorial salaries. In fact, it's hard to get a clear answer on what they are going to, although my money's on ballooning administrations that perform tasks once performed by members of the faculty but are much better-paid.
One thing a lot of it may go towards is infrastructure and expansion. I know my alma mater has always had to constantly come up with big new construction projects (new stadium, new academic buildings, new apartments, etc) because they needed something to do with all the money they were taking in. The construction seemed very clearly driven by the need to spend money, rather than the tuition being driven by the need for buildings. Providing value to students was definitely not a concern, because whatever tuition is it'll get paid - plenty of applicants were being rejected.
This may not apply to private institutions, but public schools are subject to boom-and-bust cycle of generous government funding in economic booms and budget cuts during recessions. It's easy to justify almost any project when you know that leaving money on the table means it may not be there when you do need it.
This isn't a problem unique to educational institutions, it affects most entities that practice standard budgeting. That's one reason why I favor zero-based budgets, although they have their own problems. (frequently take longer, more work, etc.)
On the supposed professor "overcompensation": I know a couple of well-respected professors' kids who had to turn down their first-choice schools because they couldn't afford to go. So even these supposedly overpaid professors can't afford these outlandish tuitions.
At any rate, professor pay has never been going up at 3-5 times the rate of inflation, and the viability of the career track has been crumbling. Overall teaching pay has been going down relative to inflation, and quite possibly in absolute terms.
Forgive me for my bitter cynicism (or don't), but I couldn't help but feel that the thesis of this article boiled down to the following quote: "My alma mater, Oberlin College, provides financial aid for as many as 70% of its students."
I have a sneaking suspicion that the author wrote this entire article to assert that Oberlin is a "top college." (I am agnostic / do not care at all on this matter.)
He does claim to answer the question of what your tuition money is really spent on: (a) he notes that salaries for tenured professors has increased, and (b) he addresses the fact that colleges are building fancy new dorms/athletic facilities/etc to increase student demand. Without evidence, asserts that your tuition pays for these. Without evidence, I would be inclined to believe that these are more likely to be funded by named endowments from private donors. Again, I feel that this thesis is merely ostensible, to justify his assertions about his alma mater.
Or you could call it "price segmentation" like Joel does:
"All from the power of segmentation: separating your customers into different groups according to how much they are willing to pay, and extracting the maximal consumer surplus from each customer."
No, they're separate things. Price segmentation is selling marginally different products, but making each product available to everyone. So you have Windows 7 Ultimate and Windows 7 Professional and Windows 7 Home and Windows 7 Home Professional and Windows 7 Ultimate Home Datacenter Server at separate prices, and even though the only difference is that you run a different build script, it's not the same as price discrimination because you let the consumer choose. I interviewed at a company once that made a home-architecture CAD tool. They sell about 20 different versions of the same software, all at different price points, each generated by different build settings from the same codebase.
Price discrimination is when you sell the same thing to different people for different prices. It's technically illegal, so universities get around it by sending you a $50,000 tuition bill and a $40,000 need-based scholarship instead of just sending you a $10,000 bill. Other forms of price discrimination include student discounts and senior discounts. Health care in the US thrives on price discrimination--the simple words "I don't have insurance, can we talk about arranging payment" can knock off 50% or better of your bills with some doctors.
Price discrimination at elite colleges means "rising tuition costs" are really much ado about nothing. The nominal tuition only represents what they charge rich people, which is often independent of what they charge not-rich people.
if you regard effort on the part of the student as part of the pay, then colleges are segmented. hard sciences and humanities educations don't really resemble each other much.
I'd generalize this further: economics doesn't explain anything until you realize that money is only one sort of accounting of wealth and status transfer.
I can see the opposite side too. Prestige isn't worth much if nobody willing to pay for it. But the fact is there are people willing to pay for it. EDIT: I guess that's what you're saying as well.
And why are people willing to pay for it? Because universities have marketed said prestige as something that is absolutely essential to success in the modern world. So of course people will buy it.
"Given the nonprofit, tax-exempt status of colleges and universities, and the powerlessness of the market to control higher-education costs due to limited supply"..
Sounds like sub-optimal supply/demand to me. If we dropped the charade that universities are anything other than for-profit corporations then we might get more supply and/or less demand. If there were more market _competition_ then I suspect we'd see prices drop significantly.
How long will it be until recommendations from trusted others and work examples are accepted as better predictors of competency and success over degrees from elite schools?
I love that some fields have already overcome this bias. I'm also glad that our globalized world is quickly making this more and more of a reality.
Exactly...my startup has some funding from a great seed program to work on this. Any suggestions on what a great social recruiting web app would look like?
Thanks, this service seems to be more for one time projects then for recruiting though. Is there anyone trying to replace/supplant resumes (not just upload them, like LinkedIn)?
Universities need to be conservative and guard their wealth. They outlast countries. It's important they be stable, many schools aim for cheap and fast which is fine but at the first bump in the road they hit serious problems.
Why do they need to outlast countries? At that point the only relationship between University("today") and University("100 years ago") is the bricks in the building. None of the professors or students that made a university whatever it was 100 years ago remains; "greatness" is then a happy coincidence.
Because prestige is what they are selling, and prestige takes lots of time to produce. The greater the prestige, the more good professors want to teach and do research there, and the more good students want to learn there. This does influence the next generation, and so on. If the quality of people stays consistently high, the prestige remains.
For most universities over the last 20 years, the number of "staff" has doubled or tripled while the number of "faculty" has remained about the same. (source: a tenured professor at a big state university). Whether this is just bloat or not is another question, but does support the argument that most tenured professors are not fat cats raking in cash from exploited college students' families.
But senior, tenured faculty at elite schools are firmly entrenched in the well-compensated professional class (top salaries at elite schools often exceed $150,000; and for scholars in economics, business and law schools, earnings can be substantially in excess of that) with superior benefits, such as university-subsided housing, lifetime heath care and seven-figure retirement accounts. Once tenure has been achieved, generally after less than ten years of work, top college teachers face no professional risk and, by and large, teach three or fewer courses a semester.
3 courses per semester is a lot of work if you're doing it right, especially when you consider the amount of time research can take. 8-10 hours per week is a good estimate of the amount of time each class takes.
Also, very few professors make $150k-- those are the stars-- and they tend to be in their late 30s if not 40s. Academic pay is 1/5 to 1/10 of what it is in other industries (and yes, it's harder to become a tenured professor than to make $1 million/year on Wall Street).
American tuition is ridiculous, but overcompensation of teaching staff is not the problem. With tuition at $40,000/year for 10 classes, that's $4000 per class. If average class size is 25, that's $100k for 150 hours of the professor's work ($667/hour). So a professor is bringing in $500+k through teaching alone. For that professor to be making $65k (more realistic than the $150k figure) is not overcompensation.
which estimates are you contesting? as someone involved tangentially in academia, none of these even raise an eye brow. you might as well be asking for sources that the sun will rise tomorrow.
if you really want hard numbers, pick your favorite public university. poke around. their faculty salaries will be public record. also, the student feedback on faculty will be public record. you should be able to figure out the average number of courses taught, and the average salary in about 10 minutes after you find the relevant excel spreadsheets.
a 3 credit hour course will involve at least 3 hours of work per week (you've got to transport your body to the room the students are in). a minimum of 1 office hour per week. you've got to come up with homeworks, and grade them. even if you look at 25 students' homework for only 1 minute each, that'll take about half an hour. so it takes 4.5 hours each just to do the bare minimum possible work for a class.
google for "average college tuition" to cover that part.
The dirty secret of universities: the job of most faculty isn't to teach, it's to research and bring prestige to the university. In the sciences, research is a byproduct of bringing in money, so research grants are the most important part.
Thus, on top of those three classes (two at the university I live near) they're expected to put in full time work on their research.
From what I see, it's about a 60 hour average week in the social sciences. That dips to 35-40 in the summers.
Professors work. A lot. Maybe not the ancient tenured ones, and not all of them, but the majority. It is far from a 40-hour job. And in the hard sciences/engineering/computer science, they could definitely be making more money in industry.
My point is that professors aren't overcompensated, because they "bring in" about $100k per class of tuition, which is about $667/hour-- although obviously deductions need to be made for administrative costs, classes are the main service-- assuming 150 hours of work per class, but are paid substantially less.
The fact that they also do research as a full-time job means that they're even less overcompensated (by which I mean, "more undercompensated").
you've got to transport your body to the room the students are in
Commuting time wouldn't be counted if we are comparing jobs in academia to jobs in other sectors of the economy.
average college tuition
Most students attending most colleges pay no more than list price for tuition, and at some colleges many students pay considerably less. (This fact, of course, partly goes against some statements in the original article, but it also goes against the statement in the grandparent comment that a student enrollment of x in a class necessarily generates a revenue stream for the college of x times the enrollment.)
That's why I'm asking for specifics. Someone here made factual claims. At least one of those claims is implausible to me (that any one professor develops massive revenue for his college by his classroom teaching activity). I base that on my college experiences, and on my current experiences in other teaching occupations. But with more specifics, we will all have a better sense of how comparable academic employment really is to other forms of employment.
er, didn't mean commuting. i meant, you have to be in the same room as the class you're teaching. and you have to stay there, for the scheduled time. the course is going to run 9AM to 10AM, and you, the professor, don't get to go somewhere else during that time.
even if there is distance teaching, you have to stop what you're doing, turn on your video conferencing program, and pretend to address the course material for 1 hour, as opposed to doing whatever else it is you want to do for that hour.
and even if a particular student is themselves paying less, any loans originated by non-university sources, or scholarships from outside the university, etc become university income. only grants, loans, work studies, etc, originated by the university itself wouldn't be new income.
so, yes, the average income per student will be less than the advertised average tuition, it will also be higher than what the average student is paying. (huzzah, upper and lower bounds!)
A. Top school tuition (U.S.): $40,000 per year
B. Average course size: 25
C. Number of courses taken by average student: 10
D. Price per course (A / C): $4,000
E. Revenue generated per course (B * D): $100,000.
This doesn't mean that each professor is "worth" $100,000 for each course, because there are administrative costs for the university. Given this, a reasonable cut for the professor might be 30-50%-- this assumes that for each professor, you need 1-2 educational staff. However, let's consider the following:
Not all courses are taught by full professors; many are taught by postdocs making less than $60k/year. Let's generously assume that the average college teacher makes $90k (although I'd bet against it being that high). Let's further assume that half his job is teaching and half is research (although research is expected to be a full-time job, and teaching is fairly part-time). So he's being compensated $45,000 for his 5 courses per year, or $9,000 each. That's 9% of what he brings in-- a tiny fraction.
This is at a "top" school? Even at the non-top college that I attended for my undergraduate degree, I had many classes with a smaller class size than that. (To be sure, in my professional school nearly all the classes were a good bit larger than that, but that is what I am trying to figure out, what is typical and best illustrates how showing up to teach a college class well prepared compares to showing up to do any other kind of job well prepared.)
So, if I may, could I kindly have an authoritative source cited for the statement that average course size is 25 at the echelon of colleges we are talking about (those with tuition of $40,000 per year)?
For you and several onlookers, I will note that everyone who looks at how well workers are compensated for their work looks not only at salaries, but also at all fringe benefits and other employer costs for compensation of the worker. One would look at funding of health insurance, paid vacations, sabbaticals, retirement benefits, and so on to see which jobs are comparable to which other jobs. I have not recently heard that jobs in academia are notorious for having meager fringe benefits in relation to salary, but rather the contrary.
I went to a top school pretty recently, and many courses in the first two years had 200-300 people in them. There were also courses higher up in the course foodchain that had fewer than ten. I would say 25 is a reasonable average figure.
Yeah, that seems to back up what I was talking about for undergrad courses. I'm sure this course I'm looking at with 680 enrollment brings up the average a bit... 772, 480, 280, 330, 248, 260, 223... and there are a good number in the 50-100 range.
The grad courses of course have smaller class sizes since they're the long tail of education, but that's not what we're talking about here. If you remove the courses with 0 undergrads, the average is probably not below 25.
For our analysis, it's the mean and not the median that matters, since we're talking about the sum of money brought in by professor teaching divided by the number of professors.
From first glance, it looks like the median is quite possibly below 25, but the mean isn't, if you only look at undergraduate courses.
Also, professional schools have huge class sizes and charge tuition at the same or an even higher level.
The Common Data Set figures are gathered by a standardized methodology (dictated in large part by the methodology of reports colleges are required to make to the federal government). Here's a pretty comprehensive list of publicly posted Common Data Set filings for colleges.
You can't talk about college costs and not also mention the enormous impact the college sports industry has had on transforming colleges from their academic role in society to that of being prestigious "mini-corporations."
Where is all the money going? Who's the top paid guy at university X?
Oh, it's the football coach.
Well why does he get to make $3 million a year while we just raised tuition 8% across the board, and cut financial aid by 20%? And that fat new sports arena which the university board of regents approved and just built for $100 million? Well, it doesn't count, because free market capitalism still applies to academic institutions—our true revenue source is selling and catering to sports fans. Professors, students, research, those are of course net losses, we just pay to keep them around in order to justify the existence of the sports team.
In a way, a University's brand, physical grounds, and costumed staff is a Disneyesque facade for the real money maker: football. Or perhaps I've just been reading too much into my Jean Baudrillard...
Football coaches are paid well because college football is a net money maker for the university--especially since they don't have to pay the athletes. If you want universities to be even more broke, by all means cut the athletic programs.
Is it a good thing that universities, who hold an implicitly benevolent, non-profit societal role, should also have such high profit margins on their "student"-players?
If the football team is bringing in the dough to fund a big chunk of the operating expenses, but aren't being fairly compensated, then the universities are exploiting those students for profit. What I don't see is how universities can use this same logic to justify using their sports teams to fund their academic operations.
This pattern sounds familiar, where else have I seen it, oh yeah: the rich should pay for the poor, because they are lucky enough to have more. (I actually believe this, and I'm just using parallel logic). A few student athletes will win the lottery moving into the pro's, so colleges "tax" athletes by not paying them, and substitute the incentive of "you might be the next Lebron." (Do s/Lebron/Google/ and doesn't it sounds eerily similar to VC startup logic?!) Then the rest of the student body benefits because the football team just paid the salary of the Poetry professor.
It might work this way, but I doubt it, although I'd love to see a study confirming how much money trickles back into colleges from their sports teams. We can just look at the larger macroscopic view for how efficient trickle down economics really is: of all the hundreds of billions given to the rich elites, how much of it trickles down to the poor? I bet the football team is keeping most of its profit, and in fact on average is a net loss to its attached college.
It's plenty to live by and I have no complaints, because I'm certainly not in it for the money; I'm stating an actual number because I want to be quite clear that tuition rates that have gone up faster than inflation for most of my lifetime are not due to professorial salaries. In fact, it's hard to get a clear answer on what they are going to, although my money's on ballooning administrations that perform tasks once performed by members of the faculty but are much better-paid.