On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 4:24 PM, Eugene Coyle <[email protected]> wrote:

> Here's a graphic from the Wall St. Journal in a story comparing 4 year
> degrees w/Assoc degrees.
>
> The full story is at
> http://online.wsj.com/articles/fed-study-says-it-still-makes-sense-to-go-to-college-1403618488?mod=WSJ_hp_RightTopStories
> [...]
> The story gives a picture of the Assoc degree that is better than what I
> have understood to be the usual view of its value.
>



Community colleges have not experienced anywhere near the tuition fee
inflation that 4-year colleges have. They haven't suffered anywhere near
the administrative bloat that 4-years have, and have not been busy spending
money converting themselves into country clubs to attract rich students.
They also have not been chasing after prestige as measured by US News. In
other words they have resisted all the major drivers of tuition inflation -
with the important exception of state budget cuts.

For some reason though, commentators on higher-ed - even the progressive
ones - simply ignore community colleges.

http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/confessions-community-college-dean/baffled
------------------------------snip

I’ve been a fan of Tom Frank since the 90’s. I actually had a subscription
to *The Baffler* in grad school, and I kept it for a while after until the
issues started arriving progressively farther apart. (Somewhere in the
basement, I still have a copy of *Commodify Your Dissent,* a wonderful
collection of early *Baffler* pieces.) *The Baffler* struck me as a rare
voice of sanity at the time.  I still remember reading Steve Albini’s piece
in The Baffler on the economics of the music industry circa 1995 and
thinking that the piece was striking and the industry unsustainable. I
stand by both.

Frank continued his hot streak into the oughts, striking with *What’s the
Matter with Kansas?*. As with his best stuff at *The Baffler,* it wasn’t so
much the original reportage as the connecting of dots that did it.

Which is why I was so disappointed in Frank’s piece
<http://www.salon.com/2014/06/08/colleges_are_full_of_it_behind_the_three_decade_scheme_to_raise_tuition_bankrupt_generations_and_hypnotize_the_media/>
in Salon this week.  Modestly titled “Colleges are Full of It,” it looks at
first like a patented Tom Frank takedown. But it’s sloppy in ways that he
typically isn’t. In an effort to recapture the thrill of youthful vitriol,
he recaptured the embarrassment of callow reporting. It’s a disappointing
misfire, because it could have been great.

The material is certainly there. Tuition increases for higher education as
a sector have outpaced inflation in the US for several decades now. The
collapse of the blue-collar aristocracy has made higher education feel
almost mandatory for young people who want to make middle-class salaries
when they grow up.  Higher education’s characteristic hand-wringing
cultural liberalism offers plenty of opportunity for the modern-day Veblen
to ply his trade. Combine all that with some easy shots at tone-deaf
journalism -- not difficult to find -- and you should really have something.

But the piece fails for some reasons so basic that I have to wonder what
happened.

Start with the antecedent. Which institutions, exactly, is Frank talking
about?

At times, he seems to be talking about “higher education.”  But then he
refers to “universities” and “university administrators,” as if those are
the same thing as “higher education.”  I read in vain for a single, passing
mention of community colleges; in Frank’s piece, they simply don’t exist.
 He makes a single, parenthetical mention of state universities, only to
concede that the real story there is of state disinvestment, rather than
administrative bloat.  His piece is fixated firmly on the elite of the
elite; plenty of Stanford, a good chunk of *New York Times,* a name-check
of Gaston Caperton. From that, it wouldn’t occur to you that nearly half of
American undergraduates attend community colleges.  You’d think they all
piled into the Ivy League.

It’s a common journalistic mistake, and one that the *New York Times,*
among others, makes with dispiriting frequency.  I expect that from the
*Times*, but not from Frank.  He’s supposed to be the boots-on-the-ground
guy.  Apparently not.

And that’s a shame, because it would change the story he’s trying to tell
in some interesting ways.  In my world, for example, per-student spending
has been flat for over a decade.  The number of administrators has actually
shrunk.  But until last year, tuition/fees went up anyway, mostly to make
up for a combination of Baumol’s cost disease -- entirely unmentioned in
the Frank piece -- and state disinvestment, which warrants only a
parenthetical.  His focus is really on elite, private universities, which
he excoriates for -- wait for it -- being self-interested.

Sara Goldrick-Rab recently made some waves with a proposal to stop sending
Federal financial aid to private colleges and universities. That way, she
argued, we’d direct public money to the public good; private colleges and
universities could compete, or not, in the open marketplace.  It’s not a
perfect proposal, but it has the considerable virtue of recognizing that
different sectors are meaningfully different. The crisis in American higher
education affordability is not actually happening at the institutions that
most students attend.  It’s happening where the most conspicuous students
attend. That’s the kind of mistake that I wouldn’t expect Tom Frank, of all
people, to make.

Meanwhile, we’re still the best bargain in higher education, if you bother
to notice.
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