Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
New York Times: Can Data Ward Off College Debt? New Strategy Focuses on Results
By Kevin Carey
Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved.
The Department of Education on Tuesday released a trove
of information that shows the average amount of debt incurred by
graduates of different academic programs at each college and university
in America. This focus on discrete programs, rather than institutions as
a whole, is gaining favor among political leaders and could have
far-reaching effects.
With anxiety
about student debt soaring — the billionaire Robert F. Smith made
headlines last weekend with his surprise promise to pay off the debts of
Morehouse College’s 2019 graduating class — the program-level
information has the potential to alter how colleges are funded,
regulated and understood by consumers in the marketplace.
Everyone
knows that different majors have different economic payoffs. Social
workers earn less than chemical engineers. But federal laws that
regulate college success don’t account for that. Instead, they average
results across the university. People don’t have a good way of seeing
how big those differences are within a particular university, let alone
comparing programs across universities.
The new, more detailed debt information was created in response to an executive order issued in March by President Trump.
Other
lawmakers have called for similar approaches. In February, Senator
Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, chairman of the Senate Education Committee
and a former university president, gave a speech
outlining his plans to revise the federal Higher Education Act.
Currently the federal government measures the percentage of borrowers at
a given college who pay their loans back. If too many students fail to
repay, colleges are barred from receiving federal funds.
Mr.
Alexander proposed a “new accountability system” based on loan
repayment rates for individual programs within colleges. This, said Mr.
Alexander, “should provide colleges with an incentive to lower tuition
and help their students finish their degrees and find jobs so they can
repay their loans.”
Both Mr. Trump
and Mr. Alexander, despite their strong criticism of President Obama on
education, are following in the footsteps of his regulatory crackdown on
for-profit colleges and short-term certificate programs. Rather than
evaluate sprawling educational conglomerates based on the average
results of hundreds of programs, the Obama rules disqualified specific
programs whose graduates didn’t earn enough money to pay back their
loans.
Mr. Alexander wants to extend
scrutiny and accountability to all colleges, but using different
measures. The Trump administration wants to replace the Obama rules and
penalties with simple transparency of outcomes by program.
In
addition, a bipartisan congressional coalition that includes Senators
Joni Ernst and Elizabeth Warren has sponsored the College Transparency
Act, which would create more comprehensive program-level data.
The
debt information released by the Department of Education is still
preliminary, so students should be cautious when using it to choose
programs and colleges. But there are other examples of how program-level
data could change how we look at higher education. The University of
Virginia, for instance, is the one of the most prestigious and selective
public universities in the nation, with an average freshman SAT score
around 1400 and barely a quarter of applicants admitted. But data
published by the state’s higher education coordinating body reveals
large differences within the university. Some University of Virginia
majors earn more than $70,000 or $80,000 three years after graduating,
while others are in the $35,000 to $50,000 range. University of Virginia
systems engineers, for example, make almost double what environmental
science majors earn.
George Mason
University, in Fairfax, Va., is less prestigious. A former commuter
school, it has a typical freshman SAT score under 1200 and accepts about
80 percent of applicants. On average, George Mason graduates earn less
than University of Virginia graduates. But as with Virginia, there are
large differences between majors within George Mason, to the point that
earnings results at the two universities greatly overlap.
Accountants
and civil engineers who graduate from George Mason earn over $60,000
per year. Psychology and architecture majors who graduate from Virginia
earn less than $45,000.
Mark
Schneider, a higher education scholar, helped the state of Virginia
gather earnings information for each university program. He is now the
director of the federal Department of Education’s institute of education
sciences, guiding collection of the program-level data called for in
Mr. Trump’s executive order. The key insight, Mr. Schneider says, is
that there is usually more variation in earnings results between
programs within colleges than between colleges.
If
Congress adopts Mr. Alexander’s plan, colleges will need to give much
closer scrutiny to programs where students borrow large amounts of money
and then struggle to land well-paying jobs. Such programs are often
overlooked, as Harvard discovered
when its graduate theater program ran afoul of the Obama regulations.
This could be a sea change in campus administrative culture, which is
typically so hands-off that the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill had no idea (this is the most charitable explanation) that one of
its departments ran a huge academic fraud operation for 18 years.
The
shift to programs could also begin to change the dynamics of the higher
education market, which is currently dominated by institutional
reputations, to the point that wealthy families are willing to pay enormous bribes for admission on the strength of brand names alone.
There
are still many disagreements and details to resolve. The Trump approach
relies on the idea that if students have better information, choices in
the higher education market will be enough to ensure quality. But there
is little evidence to support this view. Even with program data,
students will still be vulnerable to the deceptive marketing and
aggressive sales tactics that remain widespread in the for-profit
college industry.
The measures
matter, too. Mr. Alexander’s plan is to evaluate programs based on loan
repayment rates. But it isn’t known whether those rates are a good
measure of program quality. The Obama method of comparing debt levels to
student earnings, by contrast, was so accurate that many colleges pre-emptively shut down
their low-performing programs before the sanctions were even applied.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is now working to repeal those
regulations.
Policymakers will have
to guard against institutional gamesmanship. Poorly performing programs
could simply be relabeled. At-risk students could be pushed to not
declare a major at all. Program-level regulations probably work best if
accompanied by standards that apply to the college as a whole.
Time
frames are also important. It makes sense to judge a nine-month-long
medical assisting program on whether graduates find jobs as medical
assistants. The payoff for bachelor’s degrees, particularly in the
liberal arts and humanities, can take longer to manifest. And, of
course, higher learning isn’t just a way to get a job. It should guide
people toward more enlightened, fulfilling lives.
But
while college is about more than money, it can be paid for only with
money. With student debt at a record high and with one million people
defaulting on their college loans every year, it’s not surprising that
politicians across the political spectrum want to give students and
parents more information about how different programs pay off. When that
happens, higher education may never be quite the same.
Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved.
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