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How colleges misspend your tuition money
The Week ^ | 04/15/2015 | Ted Scheinman

Posted on 04/15/2015 2:28:57 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

I am on the phone with a humanities professor at a small, nationally revered liberal-arts college, and she is telling me about the seltzer situation in the faculty lounge.

"You know, the dean said we need to get the beverages out of there."

"And that's, like, a hygiene thing?"

"No, it's because they're worried we're spending too much on Diet Coke and those aluminum cans of seltzer."

"Oh."

"And the president just replaced his hood ornament with a Fabergé egg. Our Manhattan consulting firm said it was the only way to upstage Dartmouth."

OK, I made up the egg thing, but the Manhattan consultants are real enough. In fact, I'm pretty sure it was the consultants who recommended that the college "economize" by decarbonating its faculty — a task that got easier once the consultants had helped the college eliminate a terrifying number of teaching positions.

The corporate university is successfully divesting from such frivolities as club soda — and from professors, as well. In their place marches the great academic underclass, the adjuncts or lecturers or other species of contingent labor, who now account for more than half of all post-secondary teaching positions in the country.

February saw the first National Adjunct Walkout Day, denoted on social media by the hashtag #NAWD (pronounced "gnawed," no doubt — chewed up and shortly expectorated). Everyone on campus feels a bit gnawed lately, but the adjuncts have it particularly rough — no benefits, spotty prospects for job security, a half-salary cobbled together from teaching appointments at multiple schools in the region. And these same poor "academic helots" (to use a phrase from William Deresiewicz) are the ones teaching your kids.

Since 1969, the number of adjuncts has tripled in the United States. The University at Buffalo is reasonably representative: As of 2009, 65 percent of faculty there are adjuncts. This 40-year decline in academic appointments coincides precisely with the corporatization of the university, as administrations ballooned and schools vested ever-greater authority in their supervisory boards — boards that generally comprise titans of business and finance and obey the strategic orthodoxies of management school. Between 1975 and 2005, faculty hires barely kept pace with growing enrollments. Over the same period, administrative posts have trebled or more.

According to data from the National Center for Education Statistics, full-time non-faculty professionals grew by 369 percent; tenured or tenure-track faculty positions grew by a mere 22 percent. Full-time, non-tenure-track faculty grew by 259 percent, and part-time faculty by 286 percent. Those last two numbers are your academic helots — the result of trickle-down corporate wisdom, an emphasis on short-term goals, and a tendency to balance the budget starting from the wrong end.

Too often, the problem begins at the level of the executive board, usually run by representatives of consultancies and hedge funds; the rhetoric, the aggressive but narrow ambition of the corporate world, these become the university's guiding principles. By these same principles, U.S. News & World Report lists becomes like Forbes — the rankings come first, and U.S. News bases 15 percent of a university's grade on "prestige," which we all know you can't teach but you sure can buy. Chasing short-term gains in the early aughts, Wall Street brought the country to its knees; these same so-called market experts are bestowing ungainly, top-heavy budgets on the universities they oversee.

The 2012 scandal over the firing of Teresa Sullivan, president of the University of Virginia, illustrated the grim discrepancy between the aims of the corporate university and the ideals of the teaching university — remember all that blather about "strategic dynamism"? Sullivan, in fact, is an especially nice example here: She is a sociologist of class and poverty — subjects that lawmakers are actively pushing under the carpet in public universities across the country — and had clashed with the board because, as The Washington Post reported, "They felt Sullivan lacked the mettle to trim or shut down programs that couldn’t sustain themselves financially, such as obscure academic departments in classics and German." (Thomas Jefferson, an enthusiastic classicist, would likely applaud such lack of "mettle.") After enormous public outcry, Sullivan was re-instated, and the teaching faculty at UVA have, for the moment, an advocate in their president.

Elsewhere, instructors fare less well, as a professional class of executive administrators continue their zig-zagging ascent through the cursus honorum of seven-figure appointments: Become friendly enough with the moneymen and representatives of the political class, and you're guaranteed a series of headhunting, fundraising, budget-slashing gigs that will keep your kids in salmon-colored slacks through business school. Go and count the university presidents who have accepted massive bonuses and awarded concomitant raises to upper-level administrators while — sometimes in the same public statement — freezing faculty raises and hires across all departments. As Benjamin Ginsberg reported in Washington Monthly in 2011:

Facing $19 million in budget cuts and a hiring freeze, Florida Atlantic University awarded raises of 10 percent or more to top administrators, including the school’s president. In a similar vein, in February 2009, the president of the University of Vermont defended the bonuses paid to the school’s twenty-one top administrators against the backdrop of layoffs, job freezes, and program cuts at the university.

Just think about all the ways universities could economize in the other direction — cutting non-essential expenses in order to strengthen teaching. The University of Iowa spent over $200,000 this year on a search firm for its new president; University of North Carolina (where I am a teaching fellow, and technically therefore contingent labor) paid $782,000 to a public relations firm after a recent athletics scandal. (I haven't even tallied the hours-billable logged during the investigation of the scandal and subsequent drafting of the Wainstein Report.) Schools pay $100,000 and more for commencement speeches from Katie Couric or Jeff Foxworthy or Drew Carey. Somewhere, someone paid Adam Carolla $50,000 to do the same thing. Dr. Phil used to get $200,000, as when he spoke in 2011 at the University of North Texas.

Duke University estimates the starting cost of an endowed chair at $1 million. It isn't hard to imagine how many full-time faculty members — with benefits — we could hire if we sacrificed the occasional headhunter, or Drew Carey. Milton Greenberg is right: You don't need a search firm to hire a president. But some presidents — especially if they've been hand-picked by the board with a very expensive search process mounted just for the sake of appearance — refuse to buck the new orthodoxy of corporation-like spending. This indicates a severe problem in short-term vs. long-term planning, a typical disease of Wall Street now running through the veins of the college, hurting students and instructors the hardest.

The adjunct economy spans people living above, below, or athwart the poverty level: Ph.D.s on food stamps, Ph.D.s with family money, or Ph.D.s who supplement their income through tutoring, yoga instruction, journalism, etc. And they’re not poorly paid due to lack of talent; for some adjuncts, in fact, it's precisely because they're such good teachers that they haven't achieved preferment in their departments. (You need to write books if you want tenure, and how can you write books when you're teaching four classes at three different universities?)

Since 2008, American schools have been facing the problems that faced English universities under the early onslaughts of Thatcherism, when Britain began slashing its teaching budgets and what Claude Rawson describes as the "great Oxbridge exodus" sent some of Britain's greatest scholars to America. But neither Rawson nor Thatcher could have predicted how labor at American universities in the 21 century would stratify into something very like a class system, with administrators, fundraisers, and wheel-greasers the aristocracy, academic deans the gentry, and non-tenured instructors the lumpenproletariat.

Someone like George Will would argue that the current bureaucracy creep is some kind of post-hippie comeuppance for the academy, another big-government intrusion in the marketplace.

In fact, it is the corporatization of the university — re-organized into a service provider, with its committees of "strategic planning," its mission ever-more circumscribed by capitalist euphemism. This corporatization process has led to the teaching crisis. Any solution to the adjuncting dilemma must reject the premise of corporate wisdom that led us here in the first place.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Society
KEYWORDS: college; education; tuition
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1 posted on 04/15/2015 2:28:57 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Hopefully they are stealing and pricing themselves out of the market.


2 posted on 04/15/2015 2:31:37 PM PDT by EagleUSA (Liberalism removes the significance of everything.)
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To: SeekAndFind

When you think of “university waste,” think of the Duke 88.


3 posted on 04/15/2015 2:36:42 PM PDT by Fido969
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To: SeekAndFind

For years I worked for collegiate athletic departments all over the northeast.

Over the years I have seen them all go to the same “branding” firm to re-brand their athletic mascots, logos, and web pages. If you look across the different conferences, you can see who uses them— the font and “character” of the logos are identical.

And the cost for these facelifts? At minimum, $100k. Just for development, not for any products or deliverables.

It’s insane. And the “brands” are indistinguishable from each other. Five years—minimum—they will go through it again.


4 posted on 04/15/2015 2:38:30 PM PDT by Vermont Lt (When you are inclined to to buy storage boxes, but contractor bags instead.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Being an adjunct still beats saying “would you like fries with that.”

Not bad pay for a part time job - most of which you do at home.


5 posted on 04/15/2015 2:39:00 PM PDT by KosmicKitty (Liberals claim to want to hear other views, but then are shocked to discover there are other views)
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To: SeekAndFind

My daughter has picked the college that gave her the best scholarship: full tuition at University of Alabama.

She could have gone to a prestigious undergraduate school, but she has chosen to have money for a prestigious grad school.


6 posted on 04/15/2015 3:03:55 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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To: SeekAndFind

I imagine the game is close to the end now anyway regarding College’s. There is another article detailing how the “Too Big to Fail” banks are ALL bailing out of the Student Loan program. Not to mention 1/3 of All Student Loans today are in Default. All it takes is 2 consecutive years of falling enrollment and they will collapse under their own weight.


7 posted on 04/15/2015 3:09:54 PM PDT by eyeamok
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To: SeekAndFind

My son just endured “Muslim Awareness Week” at the University of Louisville.


8 posted on 04/15/2015 3:26:57 PM PDT by anoldafvet (We need a National Conservative Party for 2016.)
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To: SeekAndFind

the University I graduated from in 1994 looks vastly different in 2015. All those new buildings...why???


9 posted on 04/15/2015 3:37:22 PM PDT by RginTN
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To: SeekAndFind

“University of North Carolina (where I am a teaching fellow, and technically therefore contingent labor) “

Part of the irony here is that the author is all bent out of shape over the fact that he isn’t guaranteed a tenured job for life. Welcome to the real world.


10 posted on 04/15/2015 3:50:20 PM PDT by Avid Coug
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To: SeekAndFind

Excellent article. Very good comments. The Catholic Church is responsible for the university system and was first staffed by brilliant tutors such as Robert Sorbonne and Peter Abelard. Today, colleges and universities reject Catholicism and accept foolishness: corporate head hunters, marketing professionals and diversity counselors. The solution is for the 65% of the teachers, adjuncts, to leave and teach high school or trade school. Since that will not happen, and since adjunct work is better than working at Taco Bell, adjuncts will remain vulnerable to unethical and anti-intellectual administrators.

Each day I gain a new appreciation for the wisdom of Plato and the depth of the Gospel of John. Socrates said, “I would rather be the slave of a slave than a prisoner stuck in a cave” of foolishness. And St. John wrote, “For everyone who does wicked things hates the light” (3:18). Because administrators and full time faculty reject the bounty of the Catholic Church and exploit both students and adjuncts, they feel unworthy to embrace the brilliance of Sorbonne, Abelard, Aquinas, Vesalius, Galileo and many others from top universities.


11 posted on 04/15/2015 4:33:32 PM PDT by Falconspeed ("Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others." Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-94))
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To: SeekAndFind
Showing my age here but in '77 I got my MA after work & on GI bill. Went to a State university that held several classes in space rented from local high schools while the U built new facilities.

First shock came when my statistics instructor turned out to be one of the night school administrators (& lousy instructor), same pattern repeated at least one other class. Makes me wonder how many retirement funds are now supporting these lumps.

The decline and industrialization of higher edumacation isn't anything new.

12 posted on 04/15/2015 4:58:16 PM PDT by norton
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To: Vermont Lt

SCETV had a comical rebranding campaign back in the early 00’s.

We wound up with the ugly looking little green guy that didn’t key well and just flat out ugly.

The cost for this bit of artwork that was supposedly just scribbled during a meeting with a lobbying firm that the husband of one the higher management types was $80k. I believe the source who had been dead on accurate about everything else.


13 posted on 04/15/2015 5:00:11 PM PDT by wally_bert (There are no winners in a game of losers. I'm Tommy Joyce, welcome to the Oriental Lounge.)
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To: RginTN

At the commuter school my spouse and I attended, I’ve noticed that the dorms have turned into apartments. Instead of two people sharing a room and four to six adults sharing a bathroom, each person gets their own bedroom, often their own bathroom, only sharing a kitchen and common room.
Some of it is blamed on lots of singletons being unable to share a dorm room, and part of it is blamed on the one-upmanship to have nicer facilities for freshmen.


14 posted on 04/15/2015 5:07:37 PM PDT by tbw2
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To: SeekAndFind

Let me guess - big plush gyms, dorms, auditoriums - gigantic salaries and benefits for big name (ie TV personality) professors - buying up real estate all over (like Stockton University in south Jersey buying a casino for boardwalk classes in Atlantic City) to become corporate conglomerates - generally downgrading education at the expense of becoming income producing machines to coddle the already spoiled offspring of the elites........


15 posted on 04/15/2015 5:31:20 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: SeekAndFind

Once everyone realizes that most college material can be taught cheaply online brick and mortar colleges will start dying off. And thousands of otherwise unemployable lefturds will hit the unemployment rolls.


16 posted on 04/15/2015 5:32:40 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
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To: Avid Coug

He is probably more annoyed that he is paid less than the workers at McDonald’s, probably less than the minimum wage on a per-hour basis.

Eventually somebody will complain to the Labor Department, and the universities will look stupid and petty.


17 posted on 04/15/2015 5:40:10 PM PDT by proxy_user
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To: anoldafvet

Damn, what a slow college ... shouldn’t take a week to become “aware” of a rabid Jihadi with a bath towel wrapped around his head shouting “Allalu Ahkbar”.


18 posted on 04/15/2015 5:56:53 PM PDT by RetiredTexasVet (Benghazi Clinton only changed her image but is the same corrupt 60s Alinsky radical hag underneath.)
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To: luckystarmom
She could have gone to a prestigious undergraduate school, but she has chosen to have money for a prestigious grad school.

Smart choice. And she may be pleasantly surprised, if she excels at Alabama, how inexpensive grad school can be. Especially true at a prestigious grad school, with fellowships, teaching and research assistantships, tuition waivers, etc being fairly commonplace.

19 posted on 04/15/2015 6:51:11 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: Some Fat Guy in L.A.
The reality is that for many, going to college is not primarily to be taught information. There is a strong and growing element of positioning oneself in the larger "system" to be able to capitalize on opportunities downstream.

As a friend of mine put it, "life is a contact sport--the more contacts you have, the better."

One goes to college to make contacts that get you to grad school (and yes, to work hard, much harder than the schlub down the hall), where you develop contacts that get you into lucrative or prestigious positions after earning your advanced degree..

Online schools can't help you there.

20 posted on 04/15/2015 6:59:22 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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