Colleges: Want federal aid? Your home page must include a College
Report Card
No purchase is made with less informed consent than a college education. If I were the Education Potentate, I'd tell colleges:
HERE, I more thoroughly present the case for a colleges being required to post a College Report Card.
And HERE, I make the case in The Atlantic.
And here is a video I created to make the case.
No purchase is made with less informed consent than a college education. If I were the Education Potentate, I'd tell colleges:
We require every home, drug, packaged food, etc. to provide disclosures. For example, every tire must bear a report card rating its treadlife, temperature, and traction.
If you want federal financial aid, your homepage must include a College Report Card listing, for your institution and your three top overlap institutions, the following:
This version is for so-called four-year institutions. A similar version could be created for "two-year" colleges.
- Your true four-year graduation rate (no exclusion of athletes,
legacies, minorities admitted under special compensatory programs, etc.)
- The average freshman-to-senior growth on a specified
standardized test of writing, critical thinking, oral communication,
quantitative skills, and information literacy. Scores would be reported for each
SAT/ACT quintile. To avoid overburdening the institution, only a random sample
of 150 freshmen and 150 seniors would take the exam. To ensure examinees give
full effort, the scores would be posted on their transcript.
- The full projected four-, five- and six-year cost of attendance,
subtracting cash financial aid. A separate number would be reported for
different levels of family income and assets. The six-year cost would be
estimated by adding the percentage that the college increased its price in the
previous six years.
- The percentage of graduates who, 12 months after graduation, are
in graduate school or employed in a job requiring a college degree. The results
would be broken down by major. That would not unduly burden the institutions:
The institution's alumni survey usually contains similar information, and the
U.S. Department of Labor categorizes jobs that way. I am agnostic on whether the
institution should also report the average salary. Money does matter, especially
with higher education costing so much but I fear that students would give
projected salary undue weight.
- The results of the most recent student or alumni satisfaction
survey. Because those surveys vary widely, the College Report Card would include
only three results: the average rating of academic, non-academic
(extracurricular, housing, location,) and overall experience at the institution.
Each institution would be required to anchor the questions on a four-point scale
from "poor" to "excellent."
- The most recent accreditation visiting team report and
Association action.
HERE, I more thoroughly present the case for a colleges being required to post a College Report Card.
And HERE, I make the case in The Atlantic.
And here is a video I created to make the case.
2 comments:
I especially agree that a college should list how successful the students have been in getting college-level work, post graduation.
I'm not sure that the number of graduates is a good indicator of the school's quality. My concern is that if a college is graduating 100's or 1000's of students each year the emphasis is on quantity and not quality. In fact I would think the exact opposite. If the curriculum is very challenging and the drop-out rate is high it means something when a student does pass the courses and graduates.
For employment there is a problem that recessions or conversely good opportunities in jobs that don't require college could artificially lower the number of graduates in fields that require a degree.
There is also creeping credentialism where fields that didn't require a degree come to require one. I don't know if these problems are big enough to worry about.
I like the idea of multiple, transparent, criteria however.
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