I watched the
NBC news on April 24, and they offered another news story on the high cost of
higher education. And then their
discussion was about the cost of elite or tier one universities. What they did not talk about, and
what is seldom discussed is where should you go to college? What is the evidence that elite or top
tier universities provide a better education?
Members of the U.S. power elite have long sent their
children to elite universities in an effort to prepare them for professions and
well paying positions. And even
faculty at the lower level universities (regional universities, community
colleges) try to get their children into the tier one and elite universities.
There is clear evidence that graduating from college is
important for economic success in our rapidly changing economy. It is less
clear that attending elite universities offers more economic success than
graduating from your local
public university.
Young people,
high school and college students want to choose where to go to college, but
there are significant cost considerations that parents ( if they are going to
pay) should consider. And, if the
student is going to pay, the parents should do some serious counseling on debt.
Top private universities can cost $40,000 to $50,000 per year. Or, you could go to a U.C. for about $14,000 per year as an
undergraduate. Many graduate
programs are more. Premium ( first tier) U.C.’s cost somewhat more. U.C. Berkeley, U.C.L.A., etc.
Or, you could go to a CSU for $6,800 per year. Or, you could go to a community college for the first two
years of college at a cost in California of about. $1,400 per year.
There is some
interesting evidence reviewed here. Revisiting the Value of Elite
Colleges. David Leonhardt.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/21/revisiting-the-value-of-elite-colleges/
There is, of course, evidence that graduation from elite
universities place you in elite circles.
That is why presidents, senators, and our own oligarchy send their children to elite schools – not
to the local community college. It
was long the case that almost all of the state legislature was graduates of the
U.C. or from private universities.
That is slowly changing as CSU grads and community college grads win
more positions.
Entrance into elite status such as positions at Wall Street
firms or legal firms makes a significant
financial difference over a lifetime.
A 2011 article in the New Yorker argues clearly going to
college itself has a value. Surowiecki. “things may look grim for college graduates, but
they’re much grimmer for people without a college degree. Though recent college
grads are having a hard time finding a job, it’s much harder for recent
high-school graduates, who have an unemployment rate of nearly twenty-two per
cent. And the over-all unemployment rate for college grads is still, at 4.4 per
cent, very low. More striking, the college wage premium—how much more a college
graduate makes than someone without a degree—is at an all-time high. In fact,
the spiralling cost of education has to some degree tracked the rising wage
premium; as college has, in relative terms, become more valuable economically,
people have become willing to pay more for it. “
See the excellent essay here. http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2011/11/21/111121ta_talk_surowiecki
Also see excellent web site by G. William Domhoff.
http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html
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