Part Two of Americans Think We Have the World’s Best Colleges. We Don’t.

I have looked at the data and think this is important.  I hope the study that this talks about is widely reported. I will post later on what I think the data shows. Americans Think We Have the World’s Best Colleges. We Don’t. – NYTimes.com. Since I think this is so important, I commented further.  (And […]

Americans Think We Have the World’s Best Colleges. We Don’t. – NYTimes.com

There is more  data (“Academically Adrift” reported on this a few years ago.) that show that the “average” college grad in American Americans Think We Have the World’s Best Colleges. We Don’t. – NYTimes.com. To illustrt]ate the data, I commented as follows. “The poor quality of k-12, especially high school, is DUE to the corruption (over […]

Confessions of a Grade-Inflating Professor – Oliver Lee Bateman – The Atlantic — Is the Atlantic Doing Us A Favor

This is very interesting – very.  Maybe amazing. Confessions of a Grade-Inflating Professor – Oliver Lee Bateman – The Atlantic. Here is what I think about this person who writes that ” …students pay approximately $50 per class to watch my lectures…In an unfair system that requires students to bear the costs of their education, it […]

New York Times Editorial, Good Idea to Measure Performance, But…

This is in today’s paper. Tying Federal Aid to College Ratings – NYTimes.com. The three metrics they support are: number of poor and working-class students (>17%) graduation rates (>15%) Measuring loan default rates (<28%) At least it’s a start, but what will the real outcomes be if colleges work toward these minimum metrics?  Will more […]

“When the facts change, I change.” John Maynard Keynes

A lot of what David Leonhardt says in this article is important information, but I believe he, and others, need to understand, that data based on students from 30, or even 2o, years ago, is not suffecient to draw conclusions about today’s students.  What worries me is that there seems to be a rush to […]

From NYT Mag: “…is this a recessionary blip or the dawn of a whole new economic age?” My Answer: “No, It’s the Education Stupid.”

It’s Official: The Boomerang Kids Won’t Leave – NYTimes.com. This is a sad article.  Yes, it describes the effects of a terrible recession.  But moreso, it describes the lingering effects of not honestly giving students a good education.  It describes the effects of a thirty-plus year of misallocating national resources away from university education to […]

Is A Simpler Mortgage Application Good Or Bad, If The House Isn’t Inspected? More Ironic Than I Thought.

In my prevous post , I did’t comment on the fact that one of the authors is on the faculty of Columbia Teachers College.  I did now.  Here is the comment. One of the authors of this piece is from Columbia Teachers College. I didn’t notice that when I posted an earlier comment. That fact, […]

Is A Simpler Mortgage Application Good Or Bad, If The House Isn’t Inspected?

A Simple Way to Help Financial Aid Do Its Job – NYTimes.com. is by Susan Dynarski (whose previous article I have commented on) and Judith Scott-Clayton of Columtia Teachers College – a school I have had some problems with before.  I think it is important that I point that out, though I know nothing about […]

More On “More on Starbucks – And Arizona State – And Alarms”

An online conversation has been going on on my comment referenced in my previous post .  I will copy and past it here. Eric from NJ replied to my first comment.  (see the post ) Engineers have to have a lot of courses in math – calculus up to and beyond differential equations as well as […]