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[OPE-L] The Decline of Public Higher Education by Rick Wolff
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Title: The Decline of Public Higher Education by Rick
Wolff
The Decline of
Public Higher Education
by Rick
Wolff
Over the last quarter century,
Americans got used to the idea of their children going on to colleges
and universities. In the early 1970s, about 8.5 million
Americans attended such
institutions; by 2004 the number had doubled. The US population across this time rose by less than 50%. This
spectacular growth in our student population reflected the pent-up
demand of the mass of Americans for what they had viewed as a luxury
as well as a ticket to better jobs and higher incomes. The
demand would have far exceeded the supply had not most of the states
rapidly increased facilities for public higher education. Today,
the vast majority of US college and university students attend public, not private,
institutions. Yet
therein lies precisely the problem.
The last quarter century, and
especially the last decade, have also moved the country rightward
towards less government provision of social services (like public
higher education) and more privatization. Real
wages have stagnated since
the 1970s, so most Americans are finding it ever more difficult to pay
for public higher education. Meanwhile its costs have been rising far
faster than the general
level of inflation. We are on a collision course in which a
historic demand for higher education -- which has now become an
embedded expectation for half the population -- confronts a rapidly
escalating rationing of enrollment by cost. Social tensions and
rising resentment and anger are sure to follow.
Let's take the example of the main
campus of a major state university: the University of Massachusetts at
Amherst. Approximately 25,000 students, undergraduate and
graduate, attend that university. About three quarters come from
Massachusetts households. The total cost for in-state
undergraduate students went from $2,340 in 1978/79 to $16,584 this
academic year. That increase was three times as big as the rise
in the consumer price index over the same period. The increase
was larger still for out-of-state undergraduates. Given that
real wages stagnated across this period, paying for their children's
college-level education presented families with an ever rising level
of financial difficulty. No wonder the data show that American
workers over the last 25 years steadily increased the number of hours
worked per year (multiple jobs and/or more overtime). No wonder
those families increased household debt at historically unprecedented rates to
historically unprecedented levels.
Nor is it any wonder that students
now graduating US colleges and universities do so with increasing
levels of personal debt (in addition to their parents' household debt)
taken to pay part of college costs. The US Department of
Education says that in 2004-2005, two thirds of students graduated
from colleges and universities with debt (averaging $15,500 at public
schools and $20,000 at private schools). In New York, which runs
the nation's largest system of public higher education, the average
debt was $21,000 then, and it is higher today.
The finance-driven turn to adjuncts
and distance learning widens the gulf between public and private
higher education. The private colleges and universities see the
decline of public colleges and universities as a competitive
opportunity in the business sense. The democratization of higher
education had been notably advanced after World War 2 when the states
built up first-rate institutions that often outperformed the best and
oldest private institutions. Now, that short-lived
democratization is unraveling and with it the quality of higher
education provided to the majority of our students. A
differentiation of first (private) and second class (public) higher
education is hardening into the norm with many state and community
colleges sinking further into still lower quality educational
experiences. It would be hard to exaggerate the complex
consequences of these developments for many years and in many domains
of our society.
- Thread context:
- [OPE-L] Mike L, "Socialism is for Human Development",
glevy Wed 21 Feb 2007, 20:47 GMT
- [OPE-L] Marxism of the 21st century,
Dogan Goecmen Wed 21 Feb 2007, 10:27 GMT
- [OPE-L] China and Africa / China and Socialism Blog,
glevy Tue 20 Feb 2007, 21:18 GMT
- [OPE-L] Fw: Inkrit,
Martin Kragh Tue 20 Feb 2007, 14:37 GMT
- [OPE-L] The Decline of Public Higher Education by Rick Wolff,
Rakesh Bhandari Mon 19 Feb 2007, 04:02 GMT
- [OPE-L] President Bush and the fear of the vacuum,
Jurriaan Bendien Sat 17 Feb 2007, 19:27 GMT
- [OPE-L] CFP, "CLR James, Direct Democracy and Political Economy",
Jerry Levy Sat 17 Feb 2007, 14:16 GMT
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