Just as with Wall Street and society in general, the data seems to indicate that the people controlling the money at colleges (admin) are taking a larger and larger share of it, and with no notable increase in education quality. How is that not the problem? 2/2
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W odpowiedzi do to @RealSteveCox@saragoldrickrab i jeszcze
Can you provide any verifiable/falsifiable data that shows college education quality has increased *at all* during the period of time tuition (and admin hires) have increased so much? All the data I find says it's flat-lined at best, declined significantly at worst.
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It can’t increase when State disinvestment is the primary context. There’s your omitted factor for public’s, which are the real story.
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I know government has cut funding. But overall cost per student is still much higher in inflation-adjusted dollars, without resulting in any notable increases in quality of education. Right?
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Wrong. Investment per student is down. Disaggregate by sector.
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W odpowiedzi do to @RealSteveCox@saragoldrickrab i jeszcze
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You just sent me a graph for private colleges when we were talking public’s- the only place where govt has a Real say.
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Ok. Where are the sources for per-student spending going down in inflation-adjusted dollars?
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Lots of places including in the first chapter of my book.
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Ok. Anywhere else?
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