A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Is College Worth It?
As parents
pack their youngsters off to college, they might ask themselves whether it's
worth both the money they will spend and their children's time. Dr. Marty Nemko
has researched that question in an article aptly titled "America's Most
Over-rated Product: Higher Education
(www.martynemko.com/articles/americas-most-overrated-product-higher-education_id1539)."
The U.S.
Department of Education statistics show that 76 out of 100 students who
graduate in the bottom 40 percent of their high school class do not graduate
from college, even if they spend eight and a half years in college. That's even
with colleges having dumbed down classes to accommodate such students. Only 23
percent of the 1.3 million students who took the ACT college entrance
examinations in 2007 were prepared to do college-level study in math, English
and science. Even though a majority of students are grossly under-prepared to
do college-level work, each year colleges admit hundreds of thousands of such
students.
While
colleges have strong financial motives to admit unsuccessful students, for
failing students the experience can be devastating. They often leave with their
families, or themselves, having piled up thousands of dollars in debt. There is
possibly trauma and poor self-esteem for having failed, and perhaps
embarrassment for their families. Dr. Nemko says that worst of all is that few
of these former college students, having spent thousands of dollars, wind up in
a job that required a college education. It's not uncommon to find them driving
a taxi, working at a restaurant or department store, performing some other job
that they could have had as a high school graduate or dropout.
What about
students who are prepared for college? First, only 40 percent of each year's 2
million freshmen graduate in four years; 45 percent never graduate at all.
Often, having a college degree does not mean much. According to a 2006 Pew Charitable
Trusts study, 50 percent of college seniors failed a test that required them to
interpret a table about exercise and blood pressure, understand the arguments
of newspaper editorials, and compare credit card offers. About 20 percent of
college seniors did not have the quantitative skills to estimate if their car
had enough gas to get to the gas station. According a recent National
Assessment of Adult Literacy, the percentage of college graduates proficient in
prose literacy has declined from 40 percent to 31 percent within the past
decade. Employers report that many college graduates lack the basic skills of
critical thinking, writing and problem-solving.
Colleges are
in business. Students are a cost. Research is a profit center. When colleges
boast about having this professor who has won a science award or that professor
who has won the Nobel Prize, very often an undergraduate student will never be
taught by that professor. It is a "bait and switch" tactic and very
often your youngster will take classes not taught by a professor but taught in
large classes by a graduate student. Faculty who bring in large grants are more
highly valued than faculty who teach well. Teaching excellence is so often
undervalued that the late Ernest Boyer, vice president for Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching, quipped that, "Winning the campus
teaching award is the kiss of death when it comes to tenure."
Parents and
taxpayers cough up billions upon billions of dollars to the nation's colleges
and universities. Colleges make money whether students learn or not, whether
they graduate or not, and whether they get a good job after graduating or not.
Colleges and universities engage in "bait and switch," confer
fraudulent degrees and engage in other practices that would bring legal
sanctions if done by any other business. There is little or no oversight of the
nation's over 4,000 colleges and universities that enroll over 17 million
students. There are some colleges, such as Grove City College and Hillsdale
College, that do a fine job of undergraduate education. Useful information
about what colleges are doing what can be found in the Delaware-based
Intercollegiate Studies Institute's "Choosing the Right College" (http://isi.org/college_guide/choosing_right_college.html).
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com
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2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.