“I do not know of any organization that achieves budget discipline from the bottom up. We need to be sufficiently top-down to get the job done. Nobody’s going to volunteer to make the kind of changes that are required.”
Christopher Edley (94)
Some of the discussion on Chris' post regarding the letter from the 36 in defense of their pensions has focused on the number of those affected. Part of the problem in calculating this number has to do with the lack of clarity about what constitutes "covered compensation." I cannot clarify for individual cases but the official program description for UCRP (for members with Social Security) indicates on page 26 the following definition of Covered Compensation:
Covered Compensation
The gross monthly pay that an active employee receives for a regular and normal appointment, including pay while on sabbatical or other approved leave of absence with pay. Not included are:
pay for overtime unless in the form of compensatory time off;
pay for correspondence courses, summer session, intersession and for interquarter or vacation periods or University extension courses, unless such employment constitutes part of an annual or indefinite appointment;
pay for a position that is not normally full time except if paid on a salary or hourly rate basis;
pay that exceeds the full-time rate for the regular, normal position to which the member is appointed;
pay that exceeds the base salary as negotiated under the General Health Sciences Compensation Plan or Medical School Clinical Compensation Plan;
Friday, December 31, 2010
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Just Trying to Say that We Don't Care
UC"s latest image disaster came in the form of what I dearly hope is UC's final 2010 appearance in the California press. Today's San Francisco Chronicle headline reads, "Highest-paid UC execs demand millions in benefits." This refers to a demand by 36 senior executives that the Regents authorize UC to "calculate [their] retirement benefits as a percentage of their entire salaries, instead of the federally instituted limit of $245,000. The difference would be significant for the more than 200 UC employees who currently earn more than $245,000."
The salaries and the payouts are explained in this graphic. A $400,000 salary with the cap yields a pension of about $184,000 a year, but is bumped to $300,000 a year without.
I have never seen comments on any SF Chronicle story like the ones prompted here. There were 750 when I started this post. There will be over 800 before I finish. I would guess that 740 of them are negative, except that I haven't found a supportive one yet. Hundreds are furiously hostile. In the poll, only 5% think that the higher pensions should be granted if the university incurred a legal obligation to pay them. Nearly two-thirds take option 3, which is that the letter writers be fired.
The symbolism of the pension spike is way beyond the actual money: UC's top officials, the ones who set the policies that affect the state, display selfish greed, total oblivion to the public mission, and a tight focus on lining their already bulging pockets. It confirms the majority suspicion that universities like UC care much more about the "bottom line" than about education (Question 6). People don't see anything in this kind of effort that universities are supposed to be about. There is in the background a sense of the university's abandonment of the state's suffering middle class, and of course nothing for the poor who still want to send their kids to college. Tuition has tripled over the decade, debt goes up incessantly, public pensions are under attack exactly because of $300,000 payouts, thousands of students show up to UC every quarter with nothing but borrowed petty cash, and yet what they see senior executives spending their time on is maximizing their personal take. As one commenter said, "oink oink oink. I know this is a dumb question but what happened to the UC system's mission of educating students?" And these aren't even the commenters who are angry that UC has good pensions to begin with.
The salaries and the payouts are explained in this graphic. A $400,000 salary with the cap yields a pension of about $184,000 a year, but is bumped to $300,000 a year without.
I have never seen comments on any SF Chronicle story like the ones prompted here. There were 750 when I started this post. There will be over 800 before I finish. I would guess that 740 of them are negative, except that I haven't found a supportive one yet. Hundreds are furiously hostile. In the poll, only 5% think that the higher pensions should be granted if the university incurred a legal obligation to pay them. Nearly two-thirds take option 3, which is that the letter writers be fired.
The symbolism of the pension spike is way beyond the actual money: UC's top officials, the ones who set the policies that affect the state, display selfish greed, total oblivion to the public mission, and a tight focus on lining their already bulging pockets. It confirms the majority suspicion that universities like UC care much more about the "bottom line" than about education (Question 6). People don't see anything in this kind of effort that universities are supposed to be about. There is in the background a sense of the university's abandonment of the state's suffering middle class, and of course nothing for the poor who still want to send their kids to college. Tuition has tripled over the decade, debt goes up incessantly, public pensions are under attack exactly because of $300,000 payouts, thousands of students show up to UC every quarter with nothing but borrowed petty cash, and yet what they see senior executives spending their time on is maximizing their personal take. As one commenter said, "oink oink oink. I know this is a dumb question but what happened to the UC system's mission of educating students?" And these aren't even the commenters who are angry that UC has good pensions to begin with.
Labels:
academia and media,
administrative costs,
UC pension
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Cal State Budgeting
- SFSU students compete for open class spots (SFGate, 8/24/11)
- CSU salaries shrink amid budget cuts (OC Register, 7/8/11)
- 2007-08 CSU Support Budget
- 2008-09 CSU Budget Summary
- Alliance for CSU
- CFA Resources on Deliverology
- Mingling of Private and Public Funds at CSI's "Private" Foundations (CAprogRept, 9/2/10)
- Profile of CSU Employees
- Profile of CSU Employees - Glossary
- SacState: Buys a Building, Cuts Classes (Sacbee Dec.26)
Labels:
archive
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Academic Freedom
- Reign of the Politician-Chancellor (IHE, 8/23/11)
- The Language Judges Ignore (IHE, 8/15/11)
- Intervention From On High (IHE, 5/26/11)
- Billionaire's role in hiring decisions at Florida State University raises questions (St. Petersburg Times, 5/10/11)
- CUNY Blocks Honor for Tony Kushner (NYT, 5/4/11)
- Nevada colleges consider changes that could endanger tenure (IHE, 4/29/11)
- Equal Time for 'Traditional Values' (IHE, 4/25/11)
- Pressure on law conference threatens free speech (SFGate, 4/21/11)
- Hastings' board pulls UC brand from rights meeting (SFGate, 4/13/11)
- Appeals Court Hands Big Win to Advocates of Free Faculty Speech in Ruling on Pundit-Professor (CHE, 4/6/11)
- University of Wisconsin’s Response to FOIA Request Emphasizes Importance of Academic Freedom (emptywheel, 4/1/11)
- Michigan Think Tank Asks 3 Universities for Labor Professors' E-Mails (CHE 4/1/11)
- Objections to Demotion of UNC Researcher for Hacked Files (IHE 1/27/11)
- Strange Case of Canadian Physicist Fired for Giving A+s (8-12/2010)
- Deans Don't Have First Amendment Protection (IHE, 10/11/10)
- Attacks on Israeli Academic Freedom (Universities in Crisis, 8/26/10)
- Embryonic Stem Cell Reserach Blocked Via Financial Loss Complaint from Adult Stem-Cell Researchers (CHE 8/24/10)
- University of Arizona Gives Up Confidential Research Information (IHE, 8/13/10)
- Virginia Attorney General Threatens Academic Freedom (IHE, 7/29/10)
- BP and Academic Freedom (Cary Nelson, IHE, 7/22/10)
- Preserving Confidentiality or Suppressing Dissent? (IHE, 7/22/10)
- U Alabama Asks State to Defund Its Own Labor Center; Prof Fights BAck (7/12/10)
- UAB Closes Labor Studies Center; Challenges Professor's Tenure (CHE, 7/12/1)
- UCI Suspends Muslim Student Union Over Protest at Speech (OCRegister, 6/14/10)
- No University is an Island (Chap 1 of AAUP Pres Cary Nelson's Book)
- From Virginia: Does the Constitution Protect Academic Freedom (slate, 6/1/10)
- Kean U to Replace Depts with Executive-Led Units (5/7/10)
- Texas Law Requires FAculty to Post Syllabi on Line (5/7/10)
- More on the Ricardo Dominguez Case (IHE, 4/9/10)
- UCSD Faculty Coalition Letter To Paul Drake In Support of Ricardo Dominquez and Academic Freedom (4/5/10)
- UC-AFT Resolution in Support of BANG Lab (4/10)
- AEI Cans Frum for Criticizing Repubs (WaPo 3/26)
- Judge Rules Public Speech Not Protected by 1st Amendment When it is Submitted in Review Files (IHE, 3/18/10)
- Heckler at UCI Explains (Taher Herzallah, OC Reg 3/6/10)
- Idaho State Faculty Have No 1st Amendment Rights When Criticizing Administrators (IHE Dec 23)
- Clmate Scientist Harrassed for Critique of Artificial Snow
Labels:
archive
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
The LAT, The Regents, and The Conventional Wisdom
By Michael Meranze
With so extensive a demand, it follows that a very large part of our social comment--and nearly all that is well regarded--is devoted at any time to articulating the conventional wisdom. To some extent, this has been professionalized. Individuals, most notably the great television and radio commentators, make a profession of knowing and saying with great elegance and unction what their audience will find most acceptable. But, in general, the articulation of the conventional wisdom is a prerogative of academic, public, or business position. Thus any individual, on being elected president of a college or university, automatically wins the right to enunciate the conventional wisdom.
John Kenneth Galbraith
The Los Angeles Times responded with remarkable alacrity to the news that California legislators--concerned by the continual fee hikes and the size of executive compensation at UC and CSU--might begin to demand greater oversight over how state monies are spent in higher education. Indeed, I can't think of a more rapid response to an educational issue from the Editorial Board in recent years. One day we hear that legislators are considering certain steps, the next day we get a counter-blast from the state's leading newspaper. But is this abstract possibility really the most pressing issue for the LAT to weigh in on? What is the fuss all about? The editorial gives clues about what is really at stake--and it gives a glimpse into the conventional wisdom of California's elite opinion makers.
With so extensive a demand, it follows that a very large part of our social comment--and nearly all that is well regarded--is devoted at any time to articulating the conventional wisdom. To some extent, this has been professionalized. Individuals, most notably the great television and radio commentators, make a profession of knowing and saying with great elegance and unction what their audience will find most acceptable. But, in general, the articulation of the conventional wisdom is a prerogative of academic, public, or business position. Thus any individual, on being elected president of a college or university, automatically wins the right to enunciate the conventional wisdom.
John Kenneth Galbraith
The Los Angeles Times responded with remarkable alacrity to the news that California legislators--concerned by the continual fee hikes and the size of executive compensation at UC and CSU--might begin to demand greater oversight over how state monies are spent in higher education. Indeed, I can't think of a more rapid response to an educational issue from the Editorial Board in recent years. One day we hear that legislators are considering certain steps, the next day we get a counter-blast from the state's leading newspaper. But is this abstract possibility really the most pressing issue for the LAT to weigh in on? What is the fuss all about? The editorial gives clues about what is really at stake--and it gives a glimpse into the conventional wisdom of California's elite opinion makers.
Monday, December 20, 2010
The Debt Crisis and the Austerity Trap
State officals are caught in a mental loop, and it is nicely visualized by state treasurer Bill Lockyer's forlorn op-ed in the Los Angeles Times. Arguing that "California Isn't Broken," and anxious to head off implausible suggestions that the state could default on its debt, Lockyer and coauthor Stephen Levy write,
The article goes on to debunk the myths that California has lost more jobs and businesses than other states, that its decline is worse than that of the country's, and that its structural budget deficit is caused by runaway spending:
During the current fiscal year, general fund revenues are expected to total $89.4 billion. Education spending under Proposition 98 will total $36 billion. That leaves $53.4 billion available to pay debt service on bonds — more than eight times the $6.6 billion the state will need.Thus is raised the specter, in its very denial, that the state might spend the entirety of its non Prop 98 money on servicing its own debt.
The article goes on to debunk the myths that California has lost more jobs and businesses than other states, that its decline is worse than that of the country's, and that its structural budget deficit is caused by runaway spending:
Thirty years ago, general fund expenditures totaled about $7.43 for every $100 of personal income. In the 2009-10 fiscal year, that ratio was almost $2 less, at $5.52 for every $100 of personal income. In the current fiscal year, per capita general fund expenditures will total $2,246, less than the $2,289 spent 10 years ago and roughly equal to the inflation-adjusted level of 15 years ago.But then what? The obvious question is, "so what's wrong with spending less"? The next obvious question is, since we still have a deficit, why not spend still less than we do right now? These are entirely rational questions for our austerity culture, and they need direct and concrete answers. Nobody is going to care about cuts in general unless Lockyer, Jerry Brown and the new Sacramento order can rekindle belief in a causal connection in which cuts in public investment causes economic decline. But how will they, and who will help them?
Friday, December 17, 2010
Arts and Letters in Universities
- Inequality, power and privilege in the struggle for the humanities (Social Science Space blog, 6/20/11)
- Threats to the Liberal Arts Worry Scholars in the Humanities (CHE, 5/8/11)
- ASU Provost on Importance of Humanities (ArizRepub, 2/5/11)
- In Defense of Electives (Edelstein, IHE, 1/21/11)
- Hard Times Focus MLA's Lens on Labor and the Humanities (CHE 1/9/11)
- History Jobs in Freefall, Econ Bounces Back (IHE 1/3/11)
- The Death of Universities (Eagleton, Guardian, 12/18/10)
- Languages Losing Out in Budget Cutting (NYT, 12/5/10)
- How the Humanities (Pears, 11/10/10)
- Humanities and the Good Life (Soper, Guardian, 11/30/10)
- SUNY's Faustian Bargain (Petsko, 11/10/10)
- Why Humanities: Birkbeck Conference (11/5/10)
- Cornell President Calls for National Campaign in Defense of the Humanities (IHE, 11/1/10)
- SUNY Under Seige Website
- End Game for UK Humanities (McQuillan, London Grad School Oct 2010)
- Do Colleges Need French Departments? (Debate, NYT 10/18/10)
- SUNY. Albany Eliminating Several Language Programs (IHE, 10/4/10)
- Story of Humanities Decline Overstated (IHE, 10/1/10)
- In UK Humanities Degrees Increasingly the Preserve of the Wealthy (Guardian, 9/26/10)
- "The End of Tenure?" (NYT, 9/3/10)
- The Declining Rate of Educational Achievement (Herbert, NYT, 8/6/10)
- Education for Workers about More than the Economic (IHE, 8/6/10)
- More on the Consolidation of the Humanities at Toronto (Torontoist, 7/9/10)
- When Drug Companies Write Articles For Professors (CHE, 7/19/10)
- Toronto East Asian Studies Faculty on Literature Reorganization (7/10)
- Arizona State President Tries to Redesign the University (IHE, 7/16/10)
- U Toronto Plans to Shut Center for Comparative Literature (Globe and Mail 7/13/10)
- Study Aborad Improves Educational Outcomes, Including Those of At-Risk Students (IHE 7/13/10)
- Majoring in English at the U of Phoenix
- Middlesex Philosophy Center Survives by Moving to Kingston U (Guardian 6/10/10)
- Tennessee Bob Fights Language Dept Closures Around US (CHE 5/23/10)
- Stop Mourning the Humanities (CHE, 6/1/1/10)
- The Unintended Impact of the Humanities (CHE/5/23/10)
- This Story Concerns You: Reflections on Middlesex (Unemployed Negativity 5/5/10)
- Middlesex U (UK) Suspends Profs and Students for Protesting Closure of Philosophy Dept (5/21/10)
- Middlesex U (UK) Occupation to Save Philosophy Ended by Judge (5/14/10)
- List of Essential Capabilities (Wesleyan U 2005)
- UK Universities Move to Close Philosophy Departments Because They Aren't Profitable Enough (UniversitiesInCrisis, 5/4/10)
- Brown Considers Changing Tenure Process; Giving Administrators More Say (IHE, 4/27/10)
- Southern Cal Social Work Goes Online (IHE, 4/22/10)
- A Passion for Truth (Nussbaum, TNR 4/1/10)
- A "Third Way" For Liberal Education? (IHE, 3/30/10)
- The Humanities More Than Pay for Themselves (CHE, 3/21/10)
- Novelist Iain Pears: King's College Guts Humanities to Grow Admin (3/10)
- Cuts to Humanities at King's College London
- Are Universities Killing Interpretation? (IHE, 2/12/10)
- "The Two Cultures Revisited" (TownsendCenterNewsL)
- Protests on LGBT and Labor Issues at AHA (IHE, 1/11/10)
- Historians Face Future but what about Jobs? (IHE, 1/11/10)
- The Humanities: Beyond The Critical (CHE, 1/3/10))
- Hum Grad School: Just Don't Go (CHE 1/30/09
- "Dodging the Anvil": The Future of the Job Market (CHE, 1/4/10)
- New PhDs Sit Out MLA Convention (IHE Jan 4)
- Academic Jobs: History Down 24%, Econ Minus 19% (IHE Jan 4)
- Carnegie Mellon Project on Digital-Hybrid Education: Whither the Professor? (IHE, Dec.28)
- The Absent Presence: Today's Faculty (Brian Croxall, MLA Paper)
- Literature Jobs Fall 50% Over 2 Years (IHE Dec 17)
- UK Humanities Under Assault (TLS Nov 13)
- Public Spectres (Shannon Jackson, UCB)
- Literature Jobs Fall 50% Over 2 Years (IHE Dec 17)
Labels:
archive
Thursday, December 16, 2010
UC Autonomy: Is that Campus Closing?
The Los Angeles Times reports that there is a growing sentiment among legislators in Sacramento that they should have greater oversight and influence not only in the amount of money that UC gets but in how it is spent. Strikingly, the three points that seem to have mobilized the greatest concern are the size of executive pay and perks, the continual fee increases, and the move by UCOF and UCOP to push towards more out-of-state students. As the LAT puts it, "Lawmakers say the combined actions threaten a fundamental promise of life in the Golden State: an affordable, high-quality public college education."
You can read the entire story HERE.
You can read the entire story HERE.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Rethinking the UC Future (2): the UCOF Report's View of Revenues
Whatever message the Regents wanted to send by passing the Commission on the Future recommendations, the cuts message is what came through. UC officials are promising less to future students - that's what the reporters picked up.
The sacrifice might go somewhere if it were done in an atmosphere of fairness, intelligence, and mutual attention and respect. The UCOF process did not increase trust or communication -- the Regents, with the exception of the student Regent, did not appear at any of UCOF's listening meetings. We'll talk about fairness in a later post on pension reforms. Then there's intelligence in planning: this would involve major educational goals for the University and a revenue plan to support it. One may not expect major educational insight from the Regents, but revenues are their central responsibility.
The Recommendations I didn't get to in Part I take a shot at these. How do they do?
The sacrifice might go somewhere if it were done in an atmosphere of fairness, intelligence, and mutual attention and respect. The UCOF process did not increase trust or communication -- the Regents, with the exception of the student Regent, did not appear at any of UCOF's listening meetings. We'll talk about fairness in a later post on pension reforms. Then there's intelligence in planning: this would involve major educational goals for the University and a revenue plan to support it. One may not expect major educational insight from the Regents, but revenues are their central responsibility.
The Recommendations I didn't get to in Part I take a shot at these. How do they do?
Labels:
broken funding model,
UCOF
Educational Dimensions of Italian Riots
A UC colleague writes from Italy:
The riots broke out after Berlusconi's government – which is, among other things, attempting to pass a massive and massively impopular overhaul of the Italian universtity system, under the name of lega Gelmini – obtained a vote of confidence (fiducia) in the Chamber, amidst much manoeuvring, with Berlusconi thus managing to remain in power. The riots went on all afternoon and were extremely violent – in fact, by far the most violent Rome has witnessed in decades.
For further information, please see :
– a recent NYT article, offering a reasonable (though very partial...) introduction to current student protests in Italy:
– The Guardian on the fiducia vote saving Berlusconi's head today and the subsequent student riots in Piazza del Popolo, in Rome
– La Repubblica on today's riots in Rome, and other student actions throughout the country
– The International Herald-Tribune's blog on the Rome riots, with plenty of links to videos of the events
The riots broke out after Berlusconi's government – which is, among other things, attempting to pass a massive and massively impopular overhaul of the Italian universtity system, under the name of lega Gelmini – obtained a vote of confidence (fiducia) in the Chamber, amidst much manoeuvring, with Berlusconi thus managing to remain in power. The riots went on all afternoon and were extremely violent – in fact, by far the most violent Rome has witnessed in decades.
For further information, please see :
– a recent NYT article, offering a reasonable (though very partial...) introduction to current student protests in Italy:
– The Guardian on the fiducia vote saving Berlusconi's head today and the subsequent student riots in Piazza del Popolo, in Rome
– La Repubblica on today's riots in Rome, and other student actions throughout the country
– The International Herald-Tribune's blog on the Rome riots, with plenty of links to videos of the events
Labels:
Italian university,
student protests
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Student Cost Issues
- Battle over online class fees moves to Capitol (SFGate, 8/11/11)
- Tiny Tax Cut for Most Californians Equals a Huge, Hidden Tax on the State's College Students (Huffington Post, 8/24/11)
- State colleges, universities may need to make more budget cuts (LAT, 8/22/11)
- Negotiating No More (IHE, 8/22/11)
- UC income from tuition will surpass state funding for the first time (LAT, 8/22/11)
- The Out-of-State Admissions Edge (The Daily Beast, 8/18/11)
- Community College Students Pay Higher Fees To Support Film Tax Credit? (CBP, 8/16/11)
- Debt, Dropouts and Degrees (IHE, 8/4/11)
- To Get at College 'Value,' Report Looks at Student Debt and Degree Completion Together (CHE, 8/3/11)
- UC Crushed by Debt Deal (Changing Universities blog, 8/4/11)
- Short-Term Stability, But ... (IHE, 8/1/11)
- Interactive: See how long it will take California college graduates to break even on their education (SacBee, 7/27/11)
- Parents are dropping out of the college cost fight (LAT, 7/23/11)
- UC Regents Approve 9.6 Percent Tuition Hike (Santa Barbara Independent, 7/18/11)
- Regents approve UC tuition hike (LAT, 7/14/11)
- UC regents vote to increase tuition (SacBee blog, 7/14/11)
- A Tale of Two UCs (Changing Universities blog, 7/13/11)
- The UC Looks Beyond California for Students … and Dollars (CBP, 7/13/11)
- Cal State trustees raise tuition 12% (LAT, 7/13/11)
- Middle class feels tuition squeeze at UC, CSU (SacBee, 7/12/11)
- UC Regents Meeting Agenda for July 14th (Official UC Document)
- UC president seeks 9.6 percent tuition hike (SFGate, 7/2/11)
- University of California enrolls more out-of-state freshmen (LAT, 7/1/11)
- Academic Council Resolution on Tuition and Fees (Official UC Document, 6/30/11)
- CSU trustees asked to increase tuition by 12 percent (SacBee blog, 6/30/11)
- Second round of tuition hikes likely at UC and Cal State systems (LAT, 6/30/11)
- Higher UC, CSU tuition sure to follow deep cuts (SFGate, 6/29/11)
- University tuition likely to rise in response to California budget (SacBee blog, 6/28/11)
- UCLA students face new credit card fees for tuition, other payments (LAT, 6/22/11)
- Inequality, power and privilege in the struggle for the humanities (Social Science Space blog, 6/20/11)
- Amid budget cutbacks, California colleges reduce or eliminate summer school (LAT, 6/20/11)
- Blocked Transfer (IHE, 6/14/11)
- Supreme Court allows California to grant in-state tuition to illegal immigrants (LAT, 6/6/11)
- Priced Out: how the wrong financial-aid policies hurts low-income students (Education Trust, June 2011)
- Online Learning Portals: Customizing Colleges Right Out of Higher Education? (CHE, 5/29/11)
- Faculty Productivity and Costs at The University of Texas at Austin (May, 2011)
- More Questions and Answers Regarding the UC Budget (Changing Universities blog, 5/31/11)
- Top Colleges, Largely for the Elite (NYT, 5/24/11)
- How the UC Calculates the Instructional Cost and Funding per Student (Changing Universities blog, 5/24/11)
- Cost of Education Calculations at the University of California (corresponding white-paper also linked in post)
- UC tuition might jump 32% if tax proposal fails, official says (LAT, 5/19/11)
- Crisis of Confidence Threatens Colleges (CHE, 5/15/11)
- Richest students to pay for extra places at Britain's best universities (Guardian, 5/9/11)
- California 'Dream Act' Clears Assembly (SacBee 5/6/11)
- Time to admit (UCLA Faculty Association, 4/19/11)
- More non-Californians are offered freshman slots at UC schools (LAT, 4/19/11)
- State Support for a UC Student’s Education Hits a 20-Year Low (CaliBudgetBites blog, 4/6/11)
- Failing Our Graduate Students (CHE, 2/7/11)
- Student Debt Up 227% Since 1990: Accidentially on Purpose (SF Bay Guardian, 1/11/11)
- Is Law School a Bad Investment? (NYT, 1/8/11)
- Future of Pell Grant Funding Uncertain (NYT, 12/18/10)
- Net Income from Tuition Raises in Decline (Chronicle, 12/17/10)
- Student Borrowing Up 50% 1996-2008 (Pew 11/23/10)
- UC No Longer Such a Bargain Compared to Private Schools (SacBee, 11/15/10)
- CA Supreme Court Rules Undocumented Students Are Elligible for In-State Fees (LAT, 11/16/10)
- Letter to Yudof Critiquing Tuition Hike (CUCFA 11/15/10)
- UC Campuses Increase Out of State Recruitment Efforts (LAT, 11/15/10)
- SF Chronicle Opposes New UC/CSU Fee Hikes (11/10/10)
- CSU Considers Tuition Increases of 15% Over Next Year (SacBee, 11/8/10)
- Yudof Proposes 8% Fee Hike (SacBee, 11/8/10)
- CSU to Start Calling Fees "Tuition" (LAT, 11/8/10)
- Berkeley Crosses $50,000 Mark in Out of State Costs (CHE, 10/31/10)
- CSU and UC Plan More Fee Hikes (LAT, 10/30/10)
- Tuition Rises Once Again (IHE, 10/28/10)
- Student Debt Rose 6% in 2009 (Huffpo, 10/22/10)
- Students Can't Get Into Necessary Classes at CA CCs (LAT, 10/4/10)
- How College Health Plans are Failing Students (WSJ 9/25/10)
- Is College the Only Choice? (Dissent, 9/16/10)
- College Still Pays (NYT, 9/21/10)
- Grad Students: Privatizing Anderson a Bad Idea (LAT, 9/15/10)
- The Student Loan Scheme
- NPR: Student Debt with Newfield (KCRW.org, 9/3/10)
- Berkeley Disorientation Guide (Back to School 2010)
- "Academic Bankruptcy" (Taylor, NYT, 8/15/10)
- Student Debt Exceeds 800 Billion--Yes 800 Billion (Kamnetz, 8/11/10)
- Obama Speaks on Higher Ed--Says Little of Substance (CHE, 8/9/10)
- Homeless Student Experience at UCLA (HuffPo, 8/5/10)
- Students and Budget Cuts (Calitics, 7/27/10)
- Hunger and Homelessness at UCLA (NPR, 7/27/10)
- States Try to Protect Student Aid (IHE, 7/26/10)
- New Rules on Student Debt at For-Profits (IHE, 7/26/10)
- Proposed Reforms for the G.I. Bill--Will They Help Vets (IHE, 7/22/10)
- More Pain Ahead for Students in Fees (Capitol Weekly, 7/15/10)
- Record Number of Out of State Students in Entering Class at UC (LAT, 7/15/10)
- Berkeley Sees Latino Enrollments Drop, Nonresidents Climb (CHE 7/14/10)
- Important Loan Default Truths (The Quick and the Ed, 7/12/10)
- Non-Profits Worry About New Federal Rules (CHE, 7/8/10)
- The Dangers of For-Profit Universites (CHE, 7/7/10)
- Community Colleges Trying To Cut Time to Degree (IHE, 7/6/10)
- 68 African-Americans in Incoming Class at UCSD (LAT, 6/30/10)
- Financing Education in Basic Skills (CBP, 4/10)
- Some Student Loan Reforms Pass, Others Don't (IHE 6/28/10)
- Boalt Law Students Respond to Edley on Fees and Worker's Rights (uncivpro, 11/19/09)
- UC Wants to Switch to Tuition (LAT, 6/15/10)
- Colleges Profit by Selling Student Info to Banks (Huffpo, 6/8/10)
- Universities Offer PhDs but few Jobs (LAT, 6/4/10)
- UC Workshop on Recruitment and Enrollment of Non-Resident Students (5/27/10)
- Does Higher Ed Really Help Social Mobility? (IHR, 6/3/10)
- Student Debt Crisis On Horizon (NYT, 5/28/10)
- Due to Recession CA College Grads Head Overseas in Search of Jobs (SacBee, 5/27/10)
- Few UC Applicants on Wait Lists Offered Spots (5/22/10)
- College Grad Starting Salaries Decline Again (5/19/10)
- CSU Raises Fees on Summer Students (SacBee, 5/17/10)
- The Future of Graduate Education? (CFGE, 4/10)
- UC Berkeley Increases Offers to Out-of-State Students (4/14/10)
- UC Waitlists 10,000 Students (LAT, 4/14/10)
- Calif bill would cap fees for college students (SJ Merc 4/11/10)
- Responding to Court Case Regents to Make Clear They Can Raise Fees at Any Time (3/10/10)
- US Senate to Cut Back on Support for Students (IHE, 3/15/10)
- Senate Prepares to Take Money from Community Colleges to Help the Wealthy (firedoglake, 3/15/10)
- UC Ordered to Pay 38 Million To Former Professional Students Whom They Overcharged (SFgate, 3/12/10)
- Regents Consider Letting Professional Schools Match Private School Fees (sfgate, 3/11/10)
- UC Ordered to Pay Damages for Raising Fees after Promising Not To Raise Fees (SFSuperiorcourt, 3/10/10)
- Students Not Banks (FDLaction, 3/9/10)
- Experts Say High Fees are Good for Poor Students (SJ Merc-News 3/4/10)
- Stop Complaining: The Big Problem in California is High Marginal Tax Rates (WSJ 3/1/10)
- Yale to Raise Tuition to $49,800 (NYT, 2/24/10)
- University of Arizona May Raise Tuition by More Than $2000 (DailyWildcat, 2/24/10)
- "Majoring in Debt" (Huffpo, 2/22/10)
- Birgeneau Defends Fees as Necessary to Aid Poorer Students (Sacbee, 2/17/10)
- Public Committed to College Education--Just not to College Administrators (NYT, 2/17/10)
- Billionaires for Fee Hikes at UCSD (1/27/10)
- Dartmouth to Raise Tuition, Reinstate Loans and Cut Staff; Lenders fight Reform (Huffpo, 2/8/10)
- Obama's Budget Proposes Increased Education Spending--with some exceptions (IHE, 2/2/10)
- Obama Proposes Increased Funding for Pell Grants (LAT, 1/30/10)
- How Universities Became Hedge Funds (Bob Samuels, HuffPo 1/28/10
- Unversities Resist Cap on Student Debt (IHE 1/26/10)
- Student Anxieties and Indebtedness UP even more (LAT, 1/21/10)
- Tuition and the Working Class in NY (Inthesetimes, 1/19/10)
- Higher Ed Fees Over Time (2008 Dollars)
- UCB Ranks High in Enrolling Minority and Lower-income Students (LAT, 1/15/10)
- UC Applications at Record Levels--Driven by Transfers (SacBee, 1/15/10)
- UC Applications UP--especially amongst Transfer Students (LAT, 1/14/10)
- Kiplinger's "Best Colleges for the Money" (HuffPo 1/5/10)
- Financial Aid Problems for Foster Youth (CA Watch 1/2/10
- UC Cuts, More Obstacles for Students (LAT, 1/13/10)
- More Funding Problems for Foster Children in Higher Ed (Californiawatch 1/4/10)
- Is "Career U" the Future? (NYT, 1/3/10)
- You Thought You Were Paying for Professors? (NYT Dec 30)
- Public Universities: Fees, Applications, Funding Cuts (NYT, Nov.1)
- Budget Cuts Hit Working-Class and Minority Admissions (CHE, Oct. 11)
- New Study Shows Loan Defaults Double in Year 3 (IHE Dec 14)
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Monday, December 13, 2010
Happy Holidays: The Regents Meet
The Regents met today to discuss UCOF (which they approved) and also President Yudof's Pension proposal (modified to protect the interest of some high earners) which they also approved. The actual pension proposal is here. You can also find audio of the Regents meeting here.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Strategies, Tactics, and Goals
- Circular Firing Squad (IHE, 5/5/11)
- National Strategic Narrative (Wilson Center, 2011)
- Caution about Crisis in Education Narratives (NewYorker, 9/27/10)
- AAUP Calls For Tenuring Contingent Workers (IHE, 9/7/10)
- What the Public U "Reset" Should Look LIke (U Penn Ed Prof, 8/24/10)
- "Plan For Change 2010-2030" (Draft) (New Faculty Majority)
- New Faculty Majority Begins Push for Adjunct Unemployment Benefits (CHE, 5/24/10)
- NYU Grad Student Union Seeks Recognition (NYT, 4/27/10)
- Unappreciated Engineering Dept Packs Up, Changes Schools (CHE 3/31/10)
- A Strategy Beyond Marches (beyondchron, 3/10/10)
- Questions for a New Movement (Against the Current March/April 2010)
- Race and the Protests--Another View (reclaimuc, 3/8/10)
- California's Student Uprising (Firedoglake, 3/5/10)
- March 4th and After (Bob Samuels, HuffPo 3/5/10)
- March on Everywhere (IHE 3/5/10)
- "From Anger to Action" (Calitics, 3/5/10)
- UCSD and Black Student Union Announce Agreement to Improve Campus Climate (ucsdnews,3/4/10)
- Don't Equate Incivility with Racism (Catherine Liu 2/27/10)
- The Racial Politics of Protests and Occupation (Democratizeeducation)
- "Common Ground" and Moving Forward (TownsendCenterNewsL)
- UCB Violating Due Process in Sentencing of Student (UnCivilProcedure, 1/23/10)
- UCMeP: Create the Unison! On Privatizing Prisons and Universities
- UCI Students Continue to Protest Fee Hikes (OC Register, 1/4/10)
- Reclamations: Latest Issue (1/2/10)
- Questions about Zachary Bowin's UCB Arrest (Dec 17)
- Analysis of Student Advocate's Report on Open University Arrests (StudentActivism, Dec. 17)
- Berkeley Student Advocate Office Criticizes Open University Arrests (StudentActivism, Dec.16)
- Adjunct Unionization on the Rise (CHE, Dec.15)
- No Free Pass for Berkeley Chancellor to Shut Down Organizing (Dec 12)
- Map of North American Student Activism and Protest
- Map of European University Occupations
- Why Occupations? C. Cole Interviews Berkeley Analyst of Student Movements in Berlin
- Live Week 2009
- Student Activism Blog
- On Occupation and the International Student Movement (Shane Boyle)
- Magnify the Blows (Communal Desiring Machine)
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Saturday, December 11, 2010
Rethinking the UC Future (1): the UCOF Report's Impacts on Students
The short, special Regents meeting on Monday, December 13 will consider pension changes and the ratification of the recommendations of the Commission on the Future. Most commentators have found the Report uninspiring. The San Francisco Chronicle focused on elements that will reduce services to and contact with in-state students (more out-of-state students, on-line courses, and three-year degrees).
There's more to the Report that this, but California is in the midst of a deep crisis in which its political and business leaders adhere to a world view that makes real solutions impossible. This bipartisan view is now taking austerity to be the way forward, although it is destroying the chance to renew public infrastructure and is starting the abandonment of a generation of young people. The UCOF Report needed to create a context that would give the public a reason to change the framework of political debate.
Here are five sample steps in a purely instrumental version that could be developed much further. I deliberately omit all of the higher and deeper things universities do, like solving social and culture problems ignored by technology, or like inventing new, more humane philosophies.
Where does the flagship UC Future report fit into this?
There's more to the Report that this, but California is in the midst of a deep crisis in which its political and business leaders adhere to a world view that makes real solutions impossible. This bipartisan view is now taking austerity to be the way forward, although it is destroying the chance to renew public infrastructure and is starting the abandonment of a generation of young people. The UCOF Report needed to create a context that would give the public a reason to change the framework of political debate.
Here are five sample steps in a purely instrumental version that could be developed much further. I deliberately omit all of the higher and deeper things universities do, like solving social and culture problems ignored by technology, or like inventing new, more humane philosophies.
- Economic recovery and renewal depends on high levels of educational attainment. Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz's remarkable economic history showed strong causal ties between U.S. early educational development and economic success: the U.S. was far ahead of European rivals in high school graduation rates by 1940 and developed a similar lead over virtually every other country in college graduation rates in the thirty years after World War II (Goldin and Katz).
- But we have an educational attainment emergency. The US has completely lost its educational lead. For the first time in its history, younger people are less educated than their baby-boom parents (National Center; College Board, figures 1-4). The American proportion of students starting college who actually finish is now 56%, or 29th of the 30 OCED countries (Bowen et al. 2009, p.4). California, one of the world’s wealthiest places, has seen one of the world’s most astonishing declines in college achievement. The state’s continuation rate fell from 66 percent to 44 percent in just eight years (1996–2004). California’s rank among states in investment in higher education declined during the same period from fifth to forty-seventh. The state has cut its investment in higher education by close to 50 percent since 1980, forcing tuition increases like the 60 percent rise at the University of California from 2004 to 2008, which was followed by a 32 percent rise between 2009 and 2011.
- The 50-60% reduction in public funding for California's universities coincided with this decline, and also caused it. Contrary to popular myth, replacing public with private money reduces educational access and the quality of the result. I will say more about this below, when I discuss Recommendation 7 in the UCOF Report.
- More egalitarian societies are more efficient and have higher educational attainment. This is a longer argument, but the circumstantial evidence is clear: the inequality boom has coincided with educational decline at every level.
- Renewed public purposes will allow a more efficient and attractive University of California. A redesigned and more effective UC, one closer to its core public and scholarly missions, is TBD at a later date.
Where does the flagship UC Future report fit into this?
Labels:
public funding,
UCOF,
why we have universities
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
The Mask of Anarchy (Part II)
By Michael Meranze
Next came Fraud, and he had on,
Like Eldon, an ermined gown;
His big tears, for he wept well,
Turned to mill-stones as they fell.
And the little children, who
Round his feet played to and fro,
Thinking every tear a gem,
Had their brains knocked out by them.
Shelley, The Mask of Anarchy
As Thatcher’s epigone marshal their forces to dismantle the social contract in England, the long devolution continues in the United States. But while Cameron brandishes his vision of a “big society” here there is no semblance of an intellectual vision. In part, this difference lies in the intellectual legacies of the English and American political classes: there Thatcherism here Reaganism. Thatcher’s attack on society was rooted in a brutal individualism and aimed to secure Britain an ideological preeminence in the Atlantic alliance to compensate for the loss of empire--it was not for nothing that she was dubbed the "Iron Lady." Reagan's regime was no less destructive. But it was more utopian—albeit a utopianism bought with the substitution of futuristic fantasy for a genuine grappling with reality, the cheery predecessor to the Bush administration's contempt for those operating with a “reality based world view.”
Next came Fraud, and he had on,
Like Eldon, an ermined gown;
His big tears, for he wept well,
Turned to mill-stones as they fell.
And the little children, who
Round his feet played to and fro,
Thinking every tear a gem,
Had their brains knocked out by them.
Shelley, The Mask of Anarchy
As Thatcher’s epigone marshal their forces to dismantle the social contract in England, the long devolution continues in the United States. But while Cameron brandishes his vision of a “big society” here there is no semblance of an intellectual vision. In part, this difference lies in the intellectual legacies of the English and American political classes: there Thatcherism here Reaganism. Thatcher’s attack on society was rooted in a brutal individualism and aimed to secure Britain an ideological preeminence in the Atlantic alliance to compensate for the loss of empire--it was not for nothing that she was dubbed the "Iron Lady." Reagan's regime was no less destructive. But it was more utopian—albeit a utopianism bought with the substitution of futuristic fantasy for a genuine grappling with reality, the cheery predecessor to the Bush administration's contempt for those operating with a “reality based world view.”
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Just in Time for the Holidays
The Commission on the future has released its final report. You can read it here. Coverage in the LAT can be found here. The Sacramento Bee coverage is here. Check it out.
Budget - Transparency Project
- UC Office of the President releases payroll report (Daily Californian, 8/25/11)
- Battle over online class fees moves to Capitol (SFGate, 8/11/11)
- Outgoing SF State President Slams Governor (Bay Citizen, 8/22/11)
- Reign of the Politician-Chancellor (IHE, 8/23/11)
- UC opts out of controller’s public pay database (and shouldn't) (UCLA Faculty Association blog, 8/19/11)
- UCSD Joins With Pharmaceutical Giant Pfizer (10 news, 8/8/11)
- Conflict disclosure plan dropped (Nature News, 8/1/11) -free registration required for viewing
- UC budget lacks transparency, state audit says (SFGate, 7/29/11)
- State auditor calls for transparency in UC funding (LAT, 7/29/11)
- Where Do California's Tax Dollars Go? (CBP policy basics, 7/11)
- Gov. blasts California universities' hiring of pricey presidents (LAT, 7/28/11)
- The 100 highest-paid California State University workers (SacBee, 7/12/11)
- A Tale of Two UCs (Changing Universities blog, 7/13/11)
- “If you have to ask”: Ten sure-fire ways to lose money on research (When worlds collide blog, 5/18/11)
- US universities in Africa 'land grab' (Guardian, 6/8/11)
- Supremes Rule Against Stanford (IHE, 6/7/11)
- So You Say You're Broke? (IHE, 5/27/11)
- A 4 Billion Dollar Mystery in UC Funds (UniversityProbe, 2/10/11)
- UC Under Investigation (Aggie, 2/1/11)
- Alternatives in the Present UC Budget Crisis (Schwartz 1/26/11)
- Scientists Criticize Universities for Overemphasing Research Against Teaching (CHE, 1/13/11)
- A Plan to Reduce the UC Budget (Samuels 1/13/11)
- U Manchester Protestors Demand to See Accounts (11/12/10)
- The Investors' Club: 8 Part Investigation of the Regents (Peter Byrne)
- UK University Finance Primer (U Sheffield)
- The Conflicted University: Special Issue of Academe (11/10)
- Supreme Court to Hear Patents Case (CHE, 11/1/10)
- Oregon Athletics Used Academic Funds, In Spite of Claims (Oregonian (10/7/10)
- Arnold Vetoes Transparency for College Foundations (CHE, 10/1/10)
- UCB Eliminates 5 Smaller Academic Programs, Protects Football (NYT, 9/29/10)
- UC Berkeley To Cut 200 More Positions (SFGate, 9/22/10)
- Money Rules (IHE, 9/23/10)
- UC Construction Debt Partial Driver of Pension Cuts? (Samuels, (1/20/10)
- Has UC Violated its Own Proxy Voting Policies (NYT, 9/16/10)
- Phase 2 of Berkeley's OE
- Bain Could Destroy Innovation at Berkeley (SFBizJournal, 9/15/10)
- Yale's Endowment Shrinks; But Investment Managers Make Millions (Yale Daily News, 9/10/10)
- UCB Deans and Chairs Retreat
- GAO Report: ICR Needs to Be Updated (9/10)
- CA Assembly Passes Bill to Increase Transparency of University-linked Foundations (SacBee, 8/16/10)
- Have Colleges Broken the "Prudent-Investor Rule"? (CHE, 8/8/10)
- Who Pays For University Research? (Schwartz, 8/9/10)
- Should UC Be in the Weapons Business? (Solomon, Huffp, 8/6/10)
- More Questions about Berkeley-BP Ties (HuffPo, 7/31/10)
- Critique of the Cuts at Minnesota (IHE, 7/27/10)
- University of Illinois Raises Student Fees and Administrator's Salaries (HuffPo, 7/21/10)
- Arnold Actually Signs Whistleblower Protection Act (Cloudminder, 7/16/10)
- UC and CSU Need Greater Transparency (SFChron, 7/7/10)
- Trends In College Spending 1998-2008 (Delta Project)
- As Colleges Grow More Unequal, spending on Recreation Increases faster than Instruction (NYT, 7/9/10)
- UC Researchers Take Contract Fight Online (CalifProgrept, 6/30/10)
- UCSF Chancellor Decides to Sell Tobacco Stock (NYT, 6/29/10)
- Senate-Administrative Task Force Proposes Making Faculty More Like Independent Contractors (UCLAFAblog, 6/25/10)
- State Assembly Passes UC Whistleblower Protection--Will Arnold Sign it? (cloudminder, 6/25/10)
- US Senate Begins Investigation into For-Profit Colleges (IHE, 6/25/10)
- CEO Compensation at For-Profit Universities (CHE, 6/23/10)
- UC Loses Millions on Research Costs (SFGate, 6/16/10)
- At UC The Rich Get Richer and the Rest... (SacBee, 6/16/10)
- UCLA Task Force Report on Research Center Funding (4/10)
- The Rich Get Richer--UC Salaries at Top Continue to Rise (SFgate, 6/3/10)
- UCPB Issues Talking Points on UC Budget (May 2010)
- Will UC Administrative Reoganization Deliver Promised Savings? (CHE, 5/19/10)
- UCSD Transparency Project: Preiminary Slides (May 2010)
- Exec Salaries Responsible for Budget Gap (Daily Cal 5/10/10)
- Grassley Questions Universities Use of Tax Free Bonds for Investment Income (CHE, 5/2/10)
- Bain and Cost Cutting at Berkeley (samefacts, 4/9/10)
- UCLA Decides They Don't Need to Divert Fees To Pauley Restoration (LAT, 4/8/10)
- UCFW Proposes Bonds to Support UCRP (3/3/10)
- UC, CSU Use Student Fees for Buildings and To Cover Bad Investments (LAT, 4/4/10)
- "The Meister Controversy"--Fees and Buildings (Charles Schwartz, 3/22/10)
- Judge Finds UC Illegally Raised Fees (Judge's Order 3/10)
- Budget Transparency 101 (Charles Schwartz, UCB 3/9/10)
- Different Paths to Academic Advancement? (IHE, 3/5/10)
- UC/CSU Budget Cuts--Resources
- Charles Schwartz responds to Yudof--Suggests Debate (3/2/10)
- Yudof Responds to Sacramento Bee Editorial (3/2/10)
- Sacramento Bee to UC: Cut Adminstrative Bloat (2/28/10)
- Who Pays and Who Benefits (Bob Meister, Youtube 7 parts)
- UCSD Senate Resolution on Budget Transparency (Passed Feb 10)
- UCSD Senate Establishes Task Force on Budget Transparency (2/23/10)
- San Diego Campus Report on Budget (Jan 2010)
- Riverside Campus Financial Overview (Sept 2009)
- Santa Barbara Campus Financial Overview
- Berkeley Campus Financial Overview (January 2010)
- Public Sceptical of College Costs and College Administration (PublicAgenda, 2/17/10)
- UCLA Medical Centers Have Most Profitable Year Yet (UCLAToday, 1/22/10)
- Using Pell Grants to Increase Teaching Accountability (DemocracyJournal, 1/2010)
- Trend Towards Audits by Students and Faculty (IHE Dec 23)
- More information on UC Bonds and Responsibilities (universityprobe, Dec.12)
- Saving UCSB Requests Real-Time Budget Information, Administrative Statements
- A Better Plan for UC (Charles Schwartz)
- Analysis of Schwartz Plan (Gerald Barnett) with Especially Good Comments
- Lumina Project Grants for Tying Public Funding to Graduation Rates (IHE Nov 24)
- Sen. Grassley to Pres Yudof on UCSF Financial Descripencies (Dec 7)
- Who Pays and Who Benefits (Bob Meister, Youtube 7 parts)
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