Stamping Out Rubber-Stamp Collegiality, Part 2

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By Michael J. Bugeja, on The Chronicle – Aug. 22, 2012

If the Great Recession has taught us anything, it is that academe must abandon its usual strategy of begging state lawmakers for more money while expenses rise for utilities, technology, and instruction. Neither can we continue pressuring donors to give and give, or count on a turnaround in the economy.

In Part 1, I argued that the financial crisis in higher education—high tuition, excessive student debt, and diminished legislative support—had been exacerbated by a rubber-stamp culture that expands curricula beyond the means of many colleges and universities. Now I’d like to suggest some solutions. I believe we can decrease debt to a point where institutions can contemplate how to freeze, or even lower, tuition and provide access to education for future generations. The following series of steps, taken over a period of years, could help us dig our way out.

Read the full post on The Chronicle of Higher Education

 

 

College Freshman Survey Results

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From the Chronicle of Higher Education: Ambitious and harried, pro-environment and pro-gay rights, waylaid by a bad economy: That’s the typical college freshman this year, according to an annual national survey by the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California at Los Angeles. Read more.

OK State University Newspaper to Charge for Online Content

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From Chronicle of Higher Education. by Marc Parry. Some mainstream newspapers are trying to charge readers for online content, but the country’s roughly 2,000 college papers have shied away from paywalls. An Oklahoma student newspaper is breaking that mold—delicately. Read more.