It seems clear that the American university system is fed by a largely inelastic demand and isolated from larger market forces, thanks in part to the endless spigot of federal loan money (complimented by the strong preference of employers towards traditional degree holders).
What is less clear to me is how to fix this in a reasonable, least-damaging way.
Ban education discrimination against job applicants. (Except for jobs which require certification).
Right now, there is no drawback for an employer requiring a bachelor's degree for a job that has no use for it. Putting an end to this practice will stop the pointless rat race.
Alternatively, cap student loans, and put lower boundaries on what % of tuition goes towards instruction. Most tuition funds do not go towards education, and there is a lot of pressure for universities to spend them on building Potemkin villages.
> Right now, there is no drawback for an employer requiring a bachelor's degree for a job that has no use for it.
Increase an employer's taxes commensurate with the cost of the education for the workers they hire. If you truly need workers with bachelors, masters, PhDs, you pay for the cost. Internalize the externality.
What would be the goal of that? If someone has more education than is needed for a job but ends up taking it for other reasons, should they be taxed more than their less educated coworker?
The idea with taxing the credentialed position is that it provides some incentive to not attach a credential to positions.
My question is about what you said. The 2 proposals have very different incentives and will likely have different outcomes.
The parent of your post did not propose what you did, your idea has poor incentives for people seeking education and can be expected to have 0 influence on employers. Their idea has little impact on incentives for individuals seeking education and can be expected to encourage employers to consider the necessity of an educational requirement for a given job.
Do you really see them as equivalently arbitrary hurdles to employment?
Not at all. The incentives behind an income tax don't change based on whether they're paid on the employee's side or the employer's side. If you're an employee that costs 5% more to hire, you're going to get paid less.
(Unless the idea is that taxes should be based on whether or not a job posting requires a degree. But that would be silly, because employers could omit the education requirement from the job posting but still hire the best candidates, or have the need for a credential be taken for granted via codewords like "engineer.")
The incentives for roles where the credential is reasonable don't change.
The incentives for the roles where the credential is meaningless change because the employer can choose not to pay the tax (by removing the requirement for the credential). Under your proposal the employee can't.
> The incentives for the roles where the credential is meaningless change because the employer can choose not to pay the tax.
Which would be illegal, and carry a penalty. Unless they choose not to hire someone with an education, in which case, they didn't need the person to have that costly skill.
I meant by removing the requirement for the credential from the position. I edited in a note about it.
More: But I see that I've misunderstood what you initially proposed. It doesn't make any sense to me to tax the education, I'm not sure taxing the (credentialed) position makes sense, but at least it provides cromulent incentives.
That's an interesting idea (In that it reduces the amount of zero-training freeloading employers can do), but without other changes, I feel that it would make the problem worse - it would increase the guaranteed fire-hose of money that educational institutions will receive.
Limiting the firehose to departments that add economic value won't fix the other wasteful practices.
> In that it reduces the amount of zero-training freeloading employers can do
I'm confused why you think not training employees constitutes "freeloading." Employers are paying wages on an open market for employees that come pre-trained.
Because the government subsidizes that training. If it didn't, there would be far fewer trained employees for employers to choose from, wages would go up, and employers would have to shoulder more of the burden of training.
I guess that's the sense in which it was meant, and I missed that. On the other hand, that money isn't all pocketed by the employer -- it gets passed on through prices and quality to the employer's customers, and so on. The freeloading is enjoyed by the rest of the economy. (In fact, that freeloading effect is the justification most people give for publicly funding education.)
> Right now, there is no drawback for an employer requiring a bachelor's degree
Erm... how about fewer applicants and higher wages?
The average bachelor graduate will demand higher wages than the average high-school graduate. The market is demanding higher education for some reason. If you think its immoral that's one thing... but its completely different to argue that there is "no drawback".
Walmart isn't asking for bachelor degrees to fill in their "Walmart Greeter" or "Walmart Cashier" positions.
Your explanation of economics really hurts me to read =/
> The average bachelor graduate will demand higher wages than the average high-school graduate.
In economics the word 'demand' does not mean 'demanding' your wage or 'demanding' a certain price. Economics demand is how many people want something at a certain price. Lets repeat that. 'Demand'... is how many people... want something ...at a certain price.
It's not at all related to literally "demanding higher or lower wages", or "demanding higher or lower prices" as you are suggesting -- that is the colloquial definition of demand, and IMO it really should not be used when talking about economics. They can't be substituted for each other.
A. I was not defining collective bargaining, just giving an example of the difference between colloquial and economics demand. But lets just ignore that point as its largely unrelated. I removed it from my original comment.
B. No, it is not clear, IMO. His use makes it seem like he is actually referring to demand, when in fact he is using the colloquial definition. People routinely confuse the two.
C. Semantics become important when things become ambiguous and confusing. Most programmers would likely agree with this.
He was using the english word demand. In that these college graduates will demand (require, insist upon, refuse to work unless given) more money to accept given position. Applying jargon to an english sentence is a pointless and frustrating exercise.
Right above he/she uses supply and demand to explain higher wages. Then uses colloquial demand right under it to further explain it.
Given that, either they aren't sure of the distinction between the two and were making a mistake, or do understand the difference but still managed to make a false equivalence.
I'm betting on the first, which is why I took the time to explain it.
I really want my aerospace engineers to be able to do math...
Universities accredit them, so companies don't have to spend their money doing it (via a ridiculous number of interviews). Interviewing is already one of the largest sinks of money for a largish company, no need to make it worse.
Far better, would removing the guaranteed loan payback the government provides. This would force universities to lower prices as students wouldn't be eligible for loans. Further, it increases the barrier to universities, meaning less people will have degrees and in turn companies would have an incentive to hire people without degrees. Plus people with degrees would get paid more (making it easier to pay off loans).
The whole issue is universities aren't having to deal with market forces. Add back in the incentives and it'll be 10x cheaper.
Your aerospace engineers already need to pass engineering certification. My fast food franchise managers, on the other hand, need to show up, and apply a little common sense.
> Your aerospace engineers already need to pass engineering certification
Generally not in the U.S., unless it's a civil or electrical engineer designing infrastructure. I say this as an aerospace engineer with a mathematics PhD only.
You already have to interview the candidate; surely asking a question specific to your industry also will demonstrate their proficiencies in the math skills that you're concerned with? I can't imagine taking it for granted that because a University has certified someone that they're already proficient in the fundamentals? In fact, isn't that part of the problem?
I once interviewed a CS grad from MIT for a mid-level software engineering position; smart guy. Couldn't code. Sorry sir, but we need someone that can contribute immediately. We don't care about your school. We care about your output. Next.
(1) Even if they passed two coding style questions doesn't mean they can code.
(2) Even if they can't pass those questions doesn't mean they can't code.
45 minutes with someone gives you an idea of what they can do, a decent sample. However, graduation from a university signals that they have been sampled repeatedly for years. They can clearly learn, and should (assuming the system is semi-efficiant) and can do what the university accredited them for.
Even if they screw up that one interview, it means little by itself (baring massive failures during the interview).
> The whole issue is universities aren't having to deal with market forces. Add back in the incentives and it'll be 10x cheaper.
That's not the whole issue. If you remove the loan payback guarantee, then creditors will start to evaluate the creditworthiness of students and their families when deciding whether to offer educational loans. Poor families not being able to get loans is a political no-go.
Yeah but a even decade of bagging groceries doesn't mean a thing in a professional context, except maybe demonstrating how well one can put up with bagging groceries for ten years.
It's not JUST the education though. Holding a degree shows you're capable of following a schedule, arriving to predetermined places on time regularly, keeping yourself relatively organized, receiving and completing assignments from authority, and are willing to work hard at things that aren't immediately obviously essential but you do them anyway.
High school is mandatory though, and enforced via truancy laws. The only consequence to not showing up for college courses is wasting your (probably borrowed) money.
So is gainful employment - it's enforced via poverty, homelessness, and early death... Yet, just because most of us show up to work under duress, doesn't diminish the value of work experience.
That used to be true in the case of a high school diploma as well. As a society, we've diluted the value of that to the extent that you need to see a 4-year degree to determine those things.
Even a four-year degree seems to be diluted to the point that I wonder if we'll start require a Master's degree just to ensure someone is capable of reasonably correct written communication.
> willing to work hard at things that aren't immediately obviously essential but you do them anyway.
I view this as actually one of the biggest problems with current pedagogies and curriculum structures. They don't teach the why of things[1] and so students either are unmotivated because it seems meaningless to them, or the ones who follow blindly on faith, who think less for themselves, end up looking like the smart ones. But then maybe that's what some employers are looking for.
As Musk puts it, they fail to teach to the problem instead of the tools.[2]
There is however a certain value to being capable of doing what you're told, even if you don't understand the why of everything right off the bat. As a business owner if I need certain things in a certain way from my management or employees, especially if it's just a personal preference or a certain way I do things, I don't give a shit if my management understands it as long as they do it.
There's plenty of room for free thought in a good workplace but there are also certain things that don't need to be questioned because it's none of your business.
Sure but the "none of your business" argument doesn't really work in education.
Secondly, in the work place, it's reasonable to assume the work you are doing is beneficial to the business, whereas with classes your work isn't helping anyone else, and might not even be helping you.
Education is supposed to emulate the business world, ergo, for some things it does work.
That's a flaw in the classes, not the system. The point of a formal education system is to prepare you for the business world; if it's not matching up in some way, then it's the fault of the institution or the educator, not the student or the business.
> Ban education discrimination against job applicants. (Except for jobs which require certification).
All that will do is create a regime of required certifications that people will need to get a job, and it will probably greatly reduce (individual) employment flexibility. Employers need some way of judging applicants ability, and it's my understanding that explicit aptitude tests have basically been banned, employers have to use education as a proxy.
> put lower boundaries on what % of tuition goes towards instruction. Most tuition funds do not go towards education, and there is a lot of pressure for universities to spend them on building Potemkin villages.
I think this is a much more reasonable suggestion. Cut out all the extra costs and make college a spartan environment focused on learning.
A partial step towards that end would be to return to the situation 20 years where student loans could be discharged in bankruptcy. This would indirectly put the pressure on the other parts of the system that never cared what kind of debt load the student was being saddled with.
Probably impossible politically and even difficult operationally, but cutting off the federal funds would go a long way towards getting these institutions to get competitive.
There will always be a place for elite educational institutions, the Rolls Royce of higher ed, but there should be a Toyota Corolla equivalent as well. This program in Texas proves that it is possible.
Makes sense that the states will have to lead the way. And if those programs don't accept federal funds, then that becomes a powerful vote against the current paradigm.
Here's an idea. Instead of using federal funds to subsidize the student loan industry, give that money straight to public colleges so they don't have to charge tuition anymore.
The article should have mentioned the inflationary effects of foreign students. A lot of foreigners who study in the US are either A: loaded or B: backed by their home state. It has gotten to the point where foreign students are somewhat expected to come to subsidize American financial aid. Add in the article's woes: increasing value of a college degree, cuts in education budgets, and cutthroat competition leading to a state of constant expensive campus development all leads to an enormous bill just to keep the lights on.
The other aspect I take issue with is the farming out of federal loans to private companies. The US Department of Education doesn't need to make a profit on my federal student loans to exist, but my loan company does, and I'm stuck paying 6%. I have never seen a convincing argument as to why people like me are saddled with profit-seeking companies doing what should be a purely public service.
Foreign students are 1.13 million [1] and the sum total of all students in the US is around 20 million ( age < 25 + age > 25) [2]. How much can they really contribute marginally to tuition inflation given that they are only 5-10% of the population? If foreign workers are taking American jobs, Chinese factories are taking over manufacturing, and international students are leading to tuition inflation, in general, US seems to be coping rather poorly with the effects of globalization. More likely, internationals are like Don Quixote's windmills.
"Coping poorly" is one way of putting it. I prefer "[the American people were] suckered into bad trade deals with countries with nonexistent labor and environmental standards which forced them to compete on the same level even though foreign competitors were handed enormous advantages as though they were US states but immune from regulation, thereby gutting the American middle class and the necessary tax base necessary to foot the bill for the kind of human investments necessary for a large country to succeed in a global information economy," but I guess your way works too.
Maybe in the coastal cities and Austin TX. Aside from that, our economy is barely budging and people are sliding ever further into debt. That's the thing about rot: if you don't address it early enough it soon consumes everything.
Besides, a lot of our "rocking" of the information economy is because of legacy, not current policies. The US emerged from the Cold War as the sole global hyper power at the same time the Internet was being developed as a commercial tool in the very same country.
If Great Britain hadnt conquered half the world their cultural products (Beatles Bond and Harry Potter) would have very little reach, London would have no more reason than anywhere else to be the global financial centre, and their manufacturing and mining economy would be in equal shambles as today.
My godfather - a historian who specialized in Ancient Rome - often said that "It only takes one generation's loss to lose everything forever."
>How much can they really contribute marginally to tuition inflation given that they are only 5-10% of the population?
Being 5-10% of the population does not imply they only provide 5-10% of the tuition. They might also be more likely to be full time, again meaning they pay disproportionally more.
Yep. My school (which costs $50-60k full tuition and dorm) gives out generous scholarship... But also has so many international students who mostly pay full price that in some cases classes are 90% international.
It was always funny when I was in the cafeteria and found myself being the only non-Chinese.
To point A: this is 100% true. When consulting for higher educational institutions, the first revenue stream I evaluate is that from international students. They pay their bills, they pay more than native students, and they graduate with few issues - if they do have issues, you just ship them home.
And I don't mean large, prestigious universities - these rules for foreign students apply to everything from large private colleges/universities to small, regional community colleges.
Absolutely right. Also it costs a hell of a lot less for a wealthy family or a poor-to-moddle-income state to be educated in America and use what they learned in their home state rather than build up equivalent educational institutions at home.
That's why you end up seeing a lot of partnerships with US universities on foreign soil (Yale in Singapore, RIT in Croatia, Cornell in Abu Dhabi...)
EDIT: This also helps wealthy Chinese youths who are so committed to disappointing their parents that they fail to score within the .001 percentile on the Gaokao and have to be shipped off to Harvard instead.
I don't understand all the amenities that modern universities have (gourmet meals, private rooms, hot tubs, etc). I didn't have time for any of that - I had to study and work at my part-time job so I'd have gas & pizza money. We weren't wearing hair shirts by any means, but living in the dorms made you appreciate things afterwards.
Regarding the rising debt - it's cynical of me, but I wonder if universities don't care about their graduation rates any more. After all, there'll be another freshmen class showing up in a few months and they'll also be waving federal college aid checks at the bursar. So if students drop-out (or are on academic suspension), it's no skin off the universities' back that the student still owes all that money.
The market solution for student loan rates is to underwrite based on factors such as school attended and major/intended career. For whatever reason it seems this hasn't been done at scale until very recently (with SoFi offering low rates to the Ivies). The fact that an art history major at a lowly ranked state school pays the same loan rates as a computer science major from MIT or a medical school student from Duke implies that the market is inefficient. As a result of that inefficiency (which may be purposeful to prevent discrimination - I'm not sure), more qualified borrowers subsidize less qualified borrowers.
I suspect the market appreciates the art history graduate going through cycles of forbearance and capitalization which allow them to charge higher interest rates on the reliably solvent MIT software engineer.
Would another market solution be to have the university underwrite the first 10% or 20% of the loan. In effect, they would be on the hook if the student tried to take on too much debt, etc. As it is, universities seem to have little motivation when the debt is carried by third parties to help their students after graduation.
Absolutely. Generally you want to align incentives as closely as possible. In this case you want the student, their family, the University, and society at large to all be aligned in making sure the student is successful (however you want to define success).
A bit off-topic, but this is also true of many hospitals. The private insurers and government programs fight with hospitals to drive down rates, so the elite hospitals are aggressively marketing in the Middle East and China for rich patients who can pay the full ticket price. I lived at Children's Hospital with my daughter for ~2 months and ~1/3 of the patients were international.
There is a reverse effect as well, good hospitals in developing countries are aggressively marketing their services for medical tourism by customers in developed nations. I dont know if this has any measurable effects for pricing in those countries.
It seems like these thinkpieces about "debt" are really about two separate issues:
(1) College debt is a good investment if you learn things and graduate, but too many colleges are failing to educate students and too many students end up dropping out with debt and no degree. The good news is that this problem has a pedagogical solution, but it requires many colleges to hire faculty based on teaching skill rather than research achievements. The US is doing some of the world's best research, but too many academics are doing second-rate research at third-rate institutions. Many of those academics should instead be focused on teaching instead of research.
(2) Everyone can benefit from learning new things -- even (or perhaps especially) a liberal arts education -- but many students are attending college to get a credential and land a good job. We should be clearer about what we want institutions of higher learning to teach: life's big questions or job skills? I could imagine a higher education system that does both, but there's no good reason it should cost $50k/year to read literature/philosophy with thoughtful guidance and peer discussion. Maybe our liberal arts educations should look more like structured gap years, while technical education would have specific learning outcomes tied to workforce demand and better information for prospective students about passing rate, job placement rates, and starting salaries so they can make informed decisions about their financial risk.
My final complaint: I've never wanted my student debt forgiven, but it does sting to make student loan payments with after-tax income that goes directly to banks bailed out at taxpayer expense during the recession. If lawmakers wanted to help the student debt crisis, a great start would be making student loan payments tax-deductible (up to a certain total, and only below a certain income level) instead of just having student loan interest be tax-deductible.
> We should be clearer about what we want institutions of higher learning to teach: life's big questions or job skills?
This used to be easy to answer. The first is a university and the second is a trade school or apprenticeship. However, the latter has fallen out of favor (for some reason?), and universities are having to pick up both roles. I don't think this is the right answer, but it's the only one that seems to have political / financial support. Interestingly, software rediscovered "trade school light" in the form of coding bootcamps.
> If lawmakers wanted to help the student debt crisis, a great start would be making student loan payments tax-deductible ... instead of just having student loan interest be tax-deductible.
Tuition is deductible. So you effectively deduct the principle payments the year you pay tuition. It makes perfect sense for only the interest to be deductible the second time around.
Tuition is only deductible up to $4000 per year. Which would be reasonable if that were remotely close to what any college (outside of a few notable, laudable exceptions) are charging.
College debt is a good investment if you learn things and graduate, but too many colleges are failing to educate students and too many students end up dropping out with debt and no degree
I teach college and will also add that there are a large number of students who have no business being there. They aren't prepared, don't know why they're in college, don't have the skills (and frequently disposition) to succeed, and only go because parents / teachers told them they should. Many are poorly served by sitting quietly and doing abstract symbol manipulation; they'd be better served by schools of shorter duration that teach practical skills.
This is pretty obvious to anyone teaching at non-elite schools.
Often kids have lots of motivation for learning but classes can really take the fun out of it. They add friction by poorly presenting the material (I prefer a well formed book or document over chalkboard scribbles and ambiguous powerpoint slides), competition, deadlines (read: mastery learning), or failing to connect the material to applications.
For all of theses reasons, I learn way more on my own than I do in my classes. Many of my peers do the same.
Not the one downvoting you, but I think that what is needed for college is the drive to learn despite these issues that you raise. We've all had teachers like that. Sometimes a prof can add brilliant insight; sometimes you are better off following along in the book and not bother taking notes except in the margin; and sometimes (rarely, hopefully) you are better off skipping class and reading, perhaps from a text different than the one assigned.
The class is important for giving you an organization of the material that helps to solidify your foundation for future learning, and also to hold you accountable for the pace. This doesn't work for everybody, admittedly; but often it is an intellectual maturity thing, and by making ourselves go through it we are much better off in our fourth year than our first.
Well if learning despite these issues, despite the added friction, is what college is for, I wish they told me that when I signed up. Intentionally adding friction while also claiming that formal education itself is supposed to lubricate learning are rather antithetical aims.
The keeping of pace and lectures are not intentionally there to add difficulty or responsibility, they are there for vestiges of an era from when the lecture and class model was invented, before we even had the printing press. They exist now mainly for logistical convenience and because people think they can find reasons for why we should keep them around and why they are the best pedagogical transmission method for most students. They are not. They really suck. It has long since been determined that most people can only even hold their attention on something for ~15-20min (hence the length of TED talks).
If the material was organized in a cohesive series of books, then you could just read those, and classes would mainly be for projects. There is a reason Sal Khan and Elon Musk both skipped nearly all of their lectures in college and both advocate for education to be massively overhauled.
You should be able to just study on your own and periodically show up for proctored exams, and take them as many times as you need to in order to reach true understanding. And you should be able to take such exams without having to pay for lectures.
I don't think people are intentionally adding friction, it just sometimes gets that way.
Most people would be completely lost studying on their own. They exist, however. But if most people could do it they would. And you are correct also about lectures lasting longer than most peoples' attention span. But they stem from a time when college wasn't for most people.
At one of my former universities we had a glut of professors who were tenured, teaching courses no one wanted, or needed. The only way to keep these classes filled was to require students to take the classes, and if that didn't work, to require labs on classes that traditionally did not have, or need, a lab, and then make the professors teach those. That worked until the foreign student glut. Now that same university (George Mason fyi) has to dramatically increase the number of senseless labs so they can provide graduate teaching assistants jobs to the foreign students. It's more like a shell game than an actual education. Serious question: Does Research Methods in Psychology really need a four hour lab???
The problems with student debt are (a) it is not affected by bankruptcy and (b) the Federal government guarantees it, either via the pre-2010 program or the subsequent direct loan program.
The result is that colleges and universities do not experience meaningful declining rates of acceptance (demand) when they raise their prices.
One alternative would be to stop government support of loans entirely. That would tend to re-price college at a level closer to its actual value.
Another alternative would be to nationalize higher education.
There is literally nothing wrong with studying the humanities. I am amazed at how many brilliant engineers skip history and literature and become predictable consumerist cogs because "that's how the world works" as far as they've ever known.
Time was you'd go to college, get a job, and get trained while you work. Of course I'm not saying a rocket scientist opening should cater equally to the engineer and the artist, but we have become so addicted to pedigree that we forget how differently things can be done when we don't expect a new CS graduate to build a mobile API on their first day.
>>Time was you'd go to college, get a job, and get trained while you work.
You got trained while you worked because most people stayed at the same company from the day they started until the day they retired. So it was easy for companies to justify investing time and money into training: barring unusual circumstances, they expected that person to remain an employee for a long time.
Nowadays though, job-hopping is the norm. If the company cannot expect you to stay for longer than X years, they're going to adjust their hiring practices to make sure new hires are "safe", i.e. have degrees from prestigious colleges. Of course that still doesn't guarantee they will have the necessary skills from the get-go, but if things don't work out the hiring manager can at least cover his/her own ass by saying, "well, he/she was a <prestigious college> graduate..."
Absolutely. Seriously this cannot be stressed enough: there is a huuuuge amount of influence in the decision-making process, whether it's choosing a vendor or hiring an employee, that ultimately goes back to someone preemptively covering their ass.
When I tried an Ed-tech startup in college, our biggest barrier was that nobody wanted to sign off on an untested product in case it went wrong and they got the blame.
If all you learn is history and literature and nothing about how the world around you works - aka science and math - your deficiencies are just in other areas.
If something is "well rounded," it has shape in all directions.
I would argue that a study of history which neglects "the physics" is hardly an education of history at all.
World War 1 would not have been the same without machine guns and chemical weapons. How was it that these manufacturing processes scaled up to meet the needs of major national warfare? What was it about mustard gas that made it such an effective tool? Why was it not used more widely? Why was it used just as much as it was? Why use that and not a different kind of gas? How did they acquire the resources for, process, and send this deadly substance miles and miles to the front lines where it could be used without erupting and killing one's own troops?
To truly understand these kinds of questions, a scholar must take into account the entire scope of history, not just the narrative. History is everything.
> There is literally nothing wrong with studying the humanities.
There's a lot wrong with going deeply into debt to study the humanities, though - especially when you wind up surprised that you can't make enough of a living to pay off your loans.
I literally never said anything remotely close to this irrelevant straw man argument. Maybe if you'd studied the humanities you would've learned to read between the lines ;)
Four comments upthread from this one, eastbayjake said, "(2) Everyone can benefit from learning new things -- even (or perhaps especially) a liberal arts education -- but many students are attending college to get a credential and land a good job." Your reply to that comment triggered my comment.
Maybe I've had enough humanities to know to look at surrounding context ;-)
Here is my observation: based on oldest kid graduating 1.5 years ago from a Big 10 University with a degree in Scientific & Technical Communication. It was substantially harder to get a job than we expected. With my network - I finally located her a summer internship on 1099 basis that has turned into a year long engagement - still on a 1099 basis. To date she is showing no financial advantage from attending college. She could make the equivalent doing any number of things that don't require a 4 year degree. They are finally making noise about bringing her on FT salaried with benefits.
Then we run into someone who graduated in her same class - still hasn't found work in her field and is making do as a hostess at a restaurant. No financial advantage.
These are kids who graduated from respected university and yet here they are still struggling to see a financial benefit.
My daughter's debt is fairly low because: she took advantage of a state program that pays tuition to start college early, she lived at home, took public transportation, didn't buy a car until she got this 'job' and still lives at home with our support so that she can focus on paying off the education loans that she did end up with.
Was college worth it? I still think so and I have 3 more to go, but I have to say that I am really starting to think hard about the value of higher education.
What department at your employer would you expect to hire a Comms major? How many do they need per year? What fraction of those are college hires, vs people who have paid their dues in some trench elsewhere?
She is working in an Engineering department for a company that does sensors and cloud monitoring in a specific vertical industry. She does a combination of QA for devices and related software plus has been migrating their documentation from a wiki to SharePoint and editing the entries for clarity, grammar and writing style of the documentation as she does the migration.
People from her degree typically would work with product and engineering teams to do both internal documentation as well as user manuals, well written FAQs and other support documentation. In a major medical device company located near here they have teams of people doing this working with expert translators to appropriately localize surgical guides for surgeons around the world. In more academic settings they are sometimes employed to provide assistance in grant writing.
You make some good points about new college hires versus experienced people who have paid their dues - but that is true of any field. I am not saying I expected that she would match the salary of CS or engineering grad from the same university. But in comparison to pure communications degrees or English lit degrees - this degree is positioned as the sensible writing degree that actually has corporate positions available.
And, to the point of the article - which focused on people who maybe aren't quite ready for college and don't finish their degree but still end up with debt. If anything she is the opposite - qualified to start college 2 years early. Finished in a total of 4.5 years and for what?
Now it may payoff as she continues to pay dues in entry level work but for now she could make as much money doing any number of jobs that don't require a 4 year degree.
Minnesota. It is called PSEO. If a student scores above some threshold on standardized testing and is in the top third of their class in high school they qualify to enter college as a Junior in high school.
Some students just take a handful of college classes while others like my daughter attend FT and get their freshman and sophomore years of college done while still in high school. And, the state of Minnesota pays full tuition as well as books. It is a great deal for hardworking capable students who are willing to take on regular college work and expectations 1 or 2 years early.
Maybe we should learn from the ‘controlled’ experiment in the UK. There the new fees structure caps undergraduate tuition at £9k per year. Gov loans with very forgiving repayment terms are provided for students. The government expected only a few elite universities to charge the full £9k, with the rest charging between 6k and £8k. Their rationale was that universities would compete on price and try to deliver value for money. In reality, universities interacted with each other in entirely the opposite direction – they raced to the top. This is quite surprising, considering the huge variability between universities and courses: 3 years of tutorials in economics at Cambridge cost the same as staying at home and doing social work at the University of Huddersfield. LSE used to charge £8.5k (a symbolic gesture, more than anything), but bumped it up to £9k when it realised (1) their perceived value was derived from their price tag (the higher the better) and (2) that hyper-competition over league tables encourages aggressive spending programmes.
I think this tells us that universities will always charge as much as they can get away with, and that laissez faire economics does not work well in a market filled with institutions that are often shielded from free market effects (e.g. ‘lock-in’ to past choices, difficulties for new entrants into the market, no easy way to weigh-up costs/benefits of investment, etc.). Colleges in the US have a broad range of incentives to charge the highest acceptable market rate (which is usually between $55k and $85k for undergraduate tuition).
It think that gets a lot of it. If everyone has loan money, universities get less out of competing for students than students get out of competing for spots at universities. So the universities stop competing (financially) for students (that's a euphemism for charging the maximum).
To me it makes sense to limit the support that students see to competitive grants that only cover most of the cost of tuition (like 75 or 80 percent). Then universities have some reason to keep tuition lower (students will be somewhat price sensitive), students have motivation to examine whether they should go to school. There's probably some fairness issues to address with that, I guess the competitive aspect of the grants could be the size of the grant, with every student having some access.
edited in the (financially) in the first paragraph.
Yes. For a long time, most schools never competed on price, because the student was never seeing the price. The result was predictable: skyrocketing costs.
The college debt crisis is not so much about specifics like the rising cost of education or that more women and minorities are attending now than in the past. It's really about corruption.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac got big after the saving and loan scandal in the 80s, orchestrated by Neil Bush:
Sallie Mae got big after Reagan largely defunded public universities, switching to student loan based funding with the goal of moving those loans over to private institutions.
So what it basically comes down to is each generation keeps getting fleeced by these private firms while the government looks the other way, and taxpayers pick up the tab.
Just watch as this thread fills up with thousands of comments blaming this or that. They have us all distracted bickering amongst ourselves so we don't see who is profiting. If we want to fix higher learning in America, we need to go back to pre-1980s policies and get private financing out. Universities should be funded by endowments set up by the alumni who have profited greatly by the quality educations they received. It's no wonder that people are doing the math and opting out of college because the loans are too expensive. It was never supposed to be like that in the first place.
This is another article beating the college debt drum, and unfortunately it also misses a few critical points: Students are attending expensive schools, with expensive private loans. Instead of going to a community or state school, paid for by the federal Stafford loan, they choose to take out loans from banks to go to private, or worse, for-profit schools, with zero certainty and little guidance. This is further compounded by the endless number of require classes students are forced to take, that have little to no impact on their major, career choice, or academic goals, and are further saddled with endless labs, and fees.
Large student debt is the fault of both the students, and the schools. Both need to take responsibility.
No one is forced to go to a private college and rack up debt. Go to a state college. Most students could probably go to a junior college their first two years close to home and transfer. I always laughed seeing people thousands in debt getting a comp Sci degree making no more than me - a graduate of an unremarkable state school.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 171 ms ] threadWhat is less clear to me is how to fix this in a reasonable, least-damaging way.
Right now, there is no drawback for an employer requiring a bachelor's degree for a job that has no use for it. Putting an end to this practice will stop the pointless rat race.
Alternatively, cap student loans, and put lower boundaries on what % of tuition goes towards instruction. Most tuition funds do not go towards education, and there is a lot of pressure for universities to spend them on building Potemkin villages.
Increase an employer's taxes commensurate with the cost of the education for the workers they hire. If you truly need workers with bachelors, masters, PhDs, you pay for the cost. Internalize the externality.
The idea with taxing the credentialed position is that it provides some incentive to not attach a credential to positions.
You should ask the parent, not me. I do not advocate taxing getting an education, whether you do it directly on indirectly.
Besides, in either case, such a tax would infringe on free speech.
The parent of your post did not propose what you did, your idea has poor incentives for people seeking education and can be expected to have 0 influence on employers. Their idea has little impact on incentives for individuals seeking education and can be expected to encourage employers to consider the necessity of an educational requirement for a given job.
Do you really see them as equivalently arbitrary hurdles to employment?
(Unless the idea is that taxes should be based on whether or not a job posting requires a degree. But that would be silly, because employers could omit the education requirement from the job posting but still hire the best candidates, or have the need for a credential be taken for granted via codewords like "engineer.")
The incentives for the roles where the credential is meaningless change because the employer can choose not to pay the tax (by removing the requirement for the credential). Under your proposal the employee can't.
Which would be illegal, and carry a penalty. Unless they choose not to hire someone with an education, in which case, they didn't need the person to have that costly skill.
More: But I see that I've misunderstood what you initially proposed. It doesn't make any sense to me to tax the education, I'm not sure taxing the (credentialed) position makes sense, but at least it provides cromulent incentives.
Limiting the firehose to departments that add economic value won't fix the other wasteful practices.
I agree. It must be enacted in concert with the equivalent of single payer education.
I'm confused why you think not training employees constitutes "freeloading." Employers are paying wages on an open market for employees that come pre-trained.
Erm... how about fewer applicants and higher wages?
The average bachelor graduate will demand higher wages than the average high-school graduate. The market is demanding higher education for some reason. If you think its immoral that's one thing... but its completely different to argue that there is "no drawback".
Walmart isn't asking for bachelor degrees to fill in their "Walmart Greeter" or "Walmart Cashier" positions.
> The average bachelor graduate will demand higher wages than the average high-school graduate.
In economics the word 'demand' does not mean 'demanding' your wage or 'demanding' a certain price. Economics demand is how many people want something at a certain price. Lets repeat that. 'Demand'... is how many people... want something ...at a certain price.
It's not at all related to literally "demanding higher or lower wages", or "demanding higher or lower prices" as you are suggesting -- that is the colloquial definition of demand, and IMO it really should not be used when talking about economics. They can't be substituted for each other.
B. I think it's pretty clear what the parent meant by "demand."
C. Semantics aside, cp the market clearly bears much higher salaries for a candidate with a Bachelor's degree than for one without.
D. Your comment is needlessly rude.
B. No, it is not clear, IMO. His use makes it seem like he is actually referring to demand, when in fact he is using the colloquial definition. People routinely confuse the two.
C. Semantics become important when things become ambiguous and confusing. Most programmers would likely agree with this.
D. Fair.
Given that, either they aren't sure of the distinction between the two and were making a mistake, or do understand the difference but still managed to make a false equivalence.
I'm betting on the first, which is why I took the time to explain it.
Universities accredit them, so companies don't have to spend their money doing it (via a ridiculous number of interviews). Interviewing is already one of the largest sinks of money for a largish company, no need to make it worse.
Far better, would removing the guaranteed loan payback the government provides. This would force universities to lower prices as students wouldn't be eligible for loans. Further, it increases the barrier to universities, meaning less people will have degrees and in turn companies would have an incentive to hire people without degrees. Plus people with degrees would get paid more (making it easier to pay off loans).
The whole issue is universities aren't having to deal with market forces. Add back in the incentives and it'll be 10x cheaper.
Generally not in the U.S., unless it's a civil or electrical engineer designing infrastructure. I say this as an aerospace engineer with a mathematics PhD only.
I once interviewed a CS grad from MIT for a mid-level software engineering position; smart guy. Couldn't code. Sorry sir, but we need someone that can contribute immediately. We don't care about your school. We care about your output. Next.
(2) Even if they can't pass those questions doesn't mean they can't code.
45 minutes with someone gives you an idea of what they can do, a decent sample. However, graduation from a university signals that they have been sampled repeatedly for years. They can clearly learn, and should (assuming the system is semi-efficiant) and can do what the university accredited them for.
Even if they screw up that one interview, it means little by itself (baring massive failures during the interview).
That's not the whole issue. If you remove the loan payback guarantee, then creditors will start to evaluate the creditworthiness of students and their families when deciding whether to offer educational loans. Poor families not being able to get loans is a political no-go.
1: Job gets posted
2: High school graduate applies
3: Manager searches applicant and sees no higher education
4: "Thank you for your interest in this position, however we are looking for someone with a little more experience."
Even a four-year degree seems to be diluted to the point that I wonder if we'll start require a Master's degree just to ensure someone is capable of reasonably correct written communication.
I view this as actually one of the biggest problems with current pedagogies and curriculum structures. They don't teach the why of things[1] and so students either are unmotivated because it seems meaningless to them, or the ones who follow blindly on faith, who think less for themselves, end up looking like the smart ones. But then maybe that's what some employers are looking for.
As Musk puts it, they fail to teach to the problem instead of the tools.[2]
[1] https://youtu.be/vDwzmJpI4io?t=35m2s
[2] https://youtu.be/3UxL-0--oQo?t=25m25s
There's plenty of room for free thought in a good workplace but there are also certain things that don't need to be questioned because it's none of your business.
Secondly, in the work place, it's reasonable to assume the work you are doing is beneficial to the business, whereas with classes your work isn't helping anyone else, and might not even be helping you.
That's a flaw in the classes, not the system. The point of a formal education system is to prepare you for the business world; if it's not matching up in some way, then it's the fault of the institution or the educator, not the student or the business.
All that will do is create a regime of required certifications that people will need to get a job, and it will probably greatly reduce (individual) employment flexibility. Employers need some way of judging applicants ability, and it's my understanding that explicit aptitude tests have basically been banned, employers have to use education as a proxy.
> put lower boundaries on what % of tuition goes towards instruction. Most tuition funds do not go towards education, and there is a lot of pressure for universities to spend them on building Potemkin villages.
I think this is a much more reasonable suggestion. Cut out all the extra costs and make college a spartan environment focused on learning.
And yes, if we had tough tests, make it illegial for an employer to even ask where you went to school.
For example, if a person can pass the CA bar, let him/her practice law?
I bring up the CA bar test because it's especially hard.
There are some professions that wouldn't lend themselfs to testing, but they would be the exception.
http://www.cbtronline.com/index.php/californias-law-office-s...
A partial step towards that end would be to return to the situation 20 years where student loans could be discharged in bankruptcy. This would indirectly put the pressure on the other parts of the system that never cared what kind of debt load the student was being saddled with.
Texas has been piloting programs that grant BA's for $10K. Not per year, all in (https://www.texastribune.org/2013/01/30/guide-getting-one-te...). If Texas can do it, why not more schools.
There will always be a place for elite educational institutions, the Rolls Royce of higher ed, but there should be a Toyota Corolla equivalent as well. This program in Texas proves that it is possible.
https://qph.is.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-d6bcc38832f7f3716570d3...
The other aspect I take issue with is the farming out of federal loans to private companies. The US Department of Education doesn't need to make a profit on my federal student loans to exist, but my loan company does, and I'm stuck paying 6%. I have never seen a convincing argument as to why people like me are saddled with profit-seeking companies doing what should be a purely public service.
Edit: forgot references
[1] http://www.wsj.com/articles/international-students-stream-in...
[2] http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=98
You can maybe complain that we aren't employing even more people in the information economy.
Besides, a lot of our "rocking" of the information economy is because of legacy, not current policies. The US emerged from the Cold War as the sole global hyper power at the same time the Internet was being developed as a commercial tool in the very same country.
If Great Britain hadnt conquered half the world their cultural products (Beatles Bond and Harry Potter) would have very little reach, London would have no more reason than anywhere else to be the global financial centre, and their manufacturing and mining economy would be in equal shambles as today.
My godfather - a historian who specialized in Ancient Rome - often said that "It only takes one generation's loss to lose everything forever."
Being 5-10% of the population does not imply they only provide 5-10% of the tuition. They might also be more likely to be full time, again meaning they pay disproportionally more.
It was always funny when I was in the cafeteria and found myself being the only non-Chinese.
And I don't mean large, prestigious universities - these rules for foreign students apply to everything from large private colleges/universities to small, regional community colleges.
That's why you end up seeing a lot of partnerships with US universities on foreign soil (Yale in Singapore, RIT in Croatia, Cornell in Abu Dhabi...)
EDIT: This also helps wealthy Chinese youths who are so committed to disappointing their parents that they fail to score within the .001 percentile on the Gaokao and have to be shipped off to Harvard instead.
I don't understand all the amenities that modern universities have (gourmet meals, private rooms, hot tubs, etc). I didn't have time for any of that - I had to study and work at my part-time job so I'd have gas & pizza money. We weren't wearing hair shirts by any means, but living in the dorms made you appreciate things afterwards.
Regarding the rising debt - it's cynical of me, but I wonder if universities don't care about their graduation rates any more. After all, there'll be another freshmen class showing up in a few months and they'll also be waving federal college aid checks at the bursar. So if students drop-out (or are on academic suspension), it's no skin off the universities' back that the student still owes all that money.
(1) College debt is a good investment if you learn things and graduate, but too many colleges are failing to educate students and too many students end up dropping out with debt and no degree. The good news is that this problem has a pedagogical solution, but it requires many colleges to hire faculty based on teaching skill rather than research achievements. The US is doing some of the world's best research, but too many academics are doing second-rate research at third-rate institutions. Many of those academics should instead be focused on teaching instead of research.
(2) Everyone can benefit from learning new things -- even (or perhaps especially) a liberal arts education -- but many students are attending college to get a credential and land a good job. We should be clearer about what we want institutions of higher learning to teach: life's big questions or job skills? I could imagine a higher education system that does both, but there's no good reason it should cost $50k/year to read literature/philosophy with thoughtful guidance and peer discussion. Maybe our liberal arts educations should look more like structured gap years, while technical education would have specific learning outcomes tied to workforce demand and better information for prospective students about passing rate, job placement rates, and starting salaries so they can make informed decisions about their financial risk.
My final complaint: I've never wanted my student debt forgiven, but it does sting to make student loan payments with after-tax income that goes directly to banks bailed out at taxpayer expense during the recession. If lawmakers wanted to help the student debt crisis, a great start would be making student loan payments tax-deductible (up to a certain total, and only below a certain income level) instead of just having student loan interest be tax-deductible.
This used to be easy to answer. The first is a university and the second is a trade school or apprenticeship. However, the latter has fallen out of favor (for some reason?), and universities are having to pick up both roles. I don't think this is the right answer, but it's the only one that seems to have political / financial support. Interestingly, software rediscovered "trade school light" in the form of coding bootcamps.
> If lawmakers wanted to help the student debt crisis, a great start would be making student loan payments tax-deductible ... instead of just having student loan interest be tax-deductible.
Tuition is deductible. So you effectively deduct the principle payments the year you pay tuition. It makes perfect sense for only the interest to be deductible the second time around.
I teach college and will also add that there are a large number of students who have no business being there. They aren't prepared, don't know why they're in college, don't have the skills (and frequently disposition) to succeed, and only go because parents / teachers told them they should. Many are poorly served by sitting quietly and doing abstract symbol manipulation; they'd be better served by schools of shorter duration that teach practical skills.
This is pretty obvious to anyone teaching at non-elite schools.
* Self discipline
* Study skills/how to study
* Motivation for learning, not just getting credentials.
For all of theses reasons, I learn way more on my own than I do in my classes. Many of my peers do the same.
The class is important for giving you an organization of the material that helps to solidify your foundation for future learning, and also to hold you accountable for the pace. This doesn't work for everybody, admittedly; but often it is an intellectual maturity thing, and by making ourselves go through it we are much better off in our fourth year than our first.
The keeping of pace and lectures are not intentionally there to add difficulty or responsibility, they are there for vestiges of an era from when the lecture and class model was invented, before we even had the printing press. They exist now mainly for logistical convenience and because people think they can find reasons for why we should keep them around and why they are the best pedagogical transmission method for most students. They are not. They really suck. It has long since been determined that most people can only even hold their attention on something for ~15-20min (hence the length of TED talks).
If the material was organized in a cohesive series of books, then you could just read those, and classes would mainly be for projects. There is a reason Sal Khan and Elon Musk both skipped nearly all of their lectures in college and both advocate for education to be massively overhauled.
You should be able to just study on your own and periodically show up for proctored exams, and take them as many times as you need to in order to reach true understanding. And you should be able to take such exams without having to pay for lectures.
Most people would be completely lost studying on their own. They exist, however. But if most people could do it they would. And you are correct also about lectures lasting longer than most peoples' attention span. But they stem from a time when college wasn't for most people.
The result is that colleges and universities do not experience meaningful declining rates of acceptance (demand) when they raise their prices.
One alternative would be to stop government support of loans entirely. That would tend to re-price college at a level closer to its actual value.
Another alternative would be to nationalize higher education.
I mean, in terms of political viability, that'd be just as viable as the two options you mentioned...
Time was you'd go to college, get a job, and get trained while you work. Of course I'm not saying a rocket scientist opening should cater equally to the engineer and the artist, but we have become so addicted to pedigree that we forget how differently things can be done when we don't expect a new CS graduate to build a mobile API on their first day.
You got trained while you worked because most people stayed at the same company from the day they started until the day they retired. So it was easy for companies to justify investing time and money into training: barring unusual circumstances, they expected that person to remain an employee for a long time.
Nowadays though, job-hopping is the norm. If the company cannot expect you to stay for longer than X years, they're going to adjust their hiring practices to make sure new hires are "safe", i.e. have degrees from prestigious colleges. Of course that still doesn't guarantee they will have the necessary skills from the get-go, but if things don't work out the hiring manager can at least cover his/her own ass by saying, "well, he/she was a <prestigious college> graduate..."
When I tried an Ed-tech startup in college, our biggest barrier was that nobody wanted to sign off on an untested product in case it went wrong and they got the blame.
If all you learn is history and literature and nothing about how the world around you works - aka science and math - your deficiencies are just in other areas.
If something is "well rounded," it has shape in all directions.
World War 1 would not have been the same without machine guns and chemical weapons. How was it that these manufacturing processes scaled up to meet the needs of major national warfare? What was it about mustard gas that made it such an effective tool? Why was it not used more widely? Why was it used just as much as it was? Why use that and not a different kind of gas? How did they acquire the resources for, process, and send this deadly substance miles and miles to the front lines where it could be used without erupting and killing one's own troops?
To truly understand these kinds of questions, a scholar must take into account the entire scope of history, not just the narrative. History is everything.
There's a lot wrong with going deeply into debt to study the humanities, though - especially when you wind up surprised that you can't make enough of a living to pay off your loans.
Four comments upthread from this one, eastbayjake said, "(2) Everyone can benefit from learning new things -- even (or perhaps especially) a liberal arts education -- but many students are attending college to get a credential and land a good job." Your reply to that comment triggered my comment.
Maybe I've had enough humanities to know to look at surrounding context ;-)
Then we run into someone who graduated in her same class - still hasn't found work in her field and is making do as a hostess at a restaurant. No financial advantage.
These are kids who graduated from respected university and yet here they are still struggling to see a financial benefit.
My daughter's debt is fairly low because: she took advantage of a state program that pays tuition to start college early, she lived at home, took public transportation, didn't buy a car until she got this 'job' and still lives at home with our support so that she can focus on paying off the education loans that she did end up with.
Was college worth it? I still think so and I have 3 more to go, but I have to say that I am really starting to think hard about the value of higher education.
People from her degree typically would work with product and engineering teams to do both internal documentation as well as user manuals, well written FAQs and other support documentation. In a major medical device company located near here they have teams of people doing this working with expert translators to appropriately localize surgical guides for surgeons around the world. In more academic settings they are sometimes employed to provide assistance in grant writing.
You make some good points about new college hires versus experienced people who have paid their dues - but that is true of any field. I am not saying I expected that she would match the salary of CS or engineering grad from the same university. But in comparison to pure communications degrees or English lit degrees - this degree is positioned as the sensible writing degree that actually has corporate positions available.
And, to the point of the article - which focused on people who maybe aren't quite ready for college and don't finish their degree but still end up with debt. If anything she is the opposite - qualified to start college 2 years early. Finished in a total of 4.5 years and for what?
Now it may payoff as she continues to pay dues in entry level work but for now she could make as much money doing any number of jobs that don't require a 4 year degree.
Tell me more. What state, and what program? I'd love to have something like that for my kids...
Some students just take a handful of college classes while others like my daughter attend FT and get their freshman and sophomore years of college done while still in high school. And, the state of Minnesota pays full tuition as well as books. It is a great deal for hardworking capable students who are willing to take on regular college work and expectations 1 or 2 years early.
I think this tells us that universities will always charge as much as they can get away with, and that laissez faire economics does not work well in a market filled with institutions that are often shielded from free market effects (e.g. ‘lock-in’ to past choices, difficulties for new entrants into the market, no easy way to weigh-up costs/benefits of investment, etc.). Colleges in the US have a broad range of incentives to charge the highest acceptable market rate (which is usually between $55k and $85k for undergraduate tuition).
To me it makes sense to limit the support that students see to competitive grants that only cover most of the cost of tuition (like 75 or 80 percent). Then universities have some reason to keep tuition lower (students will be somewhat price sensitive), students have motivation to examine whether they should go to school. There's probably some fairness issues to address with that, I guess the competitive aspect of the grants could be the size of the grant, with every student having some access.
edited in the (financially) in the first paragraph.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac got big after the saving and loan scandal in the 80s, orchestrated by Neil Bush:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savings_and_loan_crisis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Bush
Sallie Mae got big after Reagan largely defunded public universities, switching to student loan based funding with the goal of moving those loans over to private institutions.
So what it basically comes down to is each generation keeps getting fleeced by these private firms while the government looks the other way, and taxpayers pick up the tab.
Just watch as this thread fills up with thousands of comments blaming this or that. They have us all distracted bickering amongst ourselves so we don't see who is profiting. If we want to fix higher learning in America, we need to go back to pre-1980s policies and get private financing out. Universities should be funded by endowments set up by the alumni who have profited greatly by the quality educations they received. It's no wonder that people are doing the math and opting out of college because the loans are too expensive. It was never supposed to be like that in the first place.
Large student debt is the fault of both the students, and the schools. Both need to take responsibility.