rudy fichtenbaum, president

65
A Better Path Forward: How Corporate Culture Threatens the Quality of Higher Education and What We Can Do to Resist its Encroachment on our Campuses Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Upload: hang

Post on 22-Feb-2016

49 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

A Better Path Forward : How Corporate Culture Threatens the Quality of Higher Education and What We Can Do to Resist its Encroachment on our Campuses. Rudy Fichtenbaum, President. Roadmap. Embracing the Corporate Model Consequences How to Fight Back. The Corporate Model. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

A Better Path Forward: How Corporate Culture Threatens the Quality of Higher Education and What We Can Do to Resist its Encroachment on our Campuses

Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Page 2: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Roadmap Embracing the Corporate Model Consequences How to Fight Back

Page 3: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate Model

Page 4: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

You know you have the corporate model when:

Administrators & politicians talk about faculty productivity

Universities & colleges care more about bond ratings than the quality of education they offer students

Administrators make unilateral changes in curriculum and academic policies

Page 5: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

You know you have the corporate model when:

You have “merit” pay Promotion and pay for faculty depend on student

evaluations Students are your customers The market is used to explain why faculty in

some disciplines earn significantly more than faculty in other disciplines.

Page 6: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

You know you have the corporate model when:

The majority of faculty have no job security, few benefits, and are largely excluded from the decision making process on campus

Your administration tries to break your union Your budget system turns each of your colleges

into profit centers so faculty will be more entrepreneurial

College presidents and politicians call for the creation of “enterprise universities” to complete the privatization of public higher education

Page 7: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

You know you have the corporate model when:

Grades Out, Badges In “Grades are broken. Students grub for them, pick classes

where good ones come easily, and otherwise hustle to win the highest scores for the least learning. As a result, college grades are inflated to the point of meaninglessness—especially to employers who want to know which diploma-holder is best qualified for their jobs.

That's a viewpoint driving experiments in education badges. Offered mostly by online start-ups, the

badges are modeled on the brightly colored patches on Boy Scout uniforms but are inspired primarily by video games…”

Page 8: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

You know you have the corporate model when:

“Professors Compete for Bonuses Based on Student Evaluations”

“Some faculty members at Texas A&M University will each be $10,000 richer next month, and they will have their students to thank. The university system is awarding bonuses ranging from $2,500 to $10,000 to faculty members who received the highest grades on end-of-semester student evaluations.

Oklahoma awards $5,000 to $10,000 to participating engineering professors who score in the top 5 percent on their

semester-end student evaluations. Those who score in the next 15 percent receive half those amounts. Similar bonuses are offered for top-rated business professors.”

Page 9: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate Model Recently David Schultz published a noteworthy essay in

Logos entitled “The Rise and Demise of Neo-Liberal University: The Collapsing Business Plan of American Higher Education.”

Two models of higher education since the end of WW II: The Dewey model, in which public institutions were central,

and institutions promoted a Jeffersonian view of higher education, recognizing an educated citizenry as central to democracy.

The Corporate University, with top-down authority with administrators and corporate-led boards displacing traditional faculty governance. Decision-making focuses on increased revenue, using certain programs as cash cows, while designing others to attract private/corporate donations.

Page 10: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate University “Nationwide patterns since 1980 show that

the context has transformed through universities’ increasing use of a corporate business model that goes well beyond Justice Brennan’s observation in Yeshiva that universities have become ‘big business.’ ”

—Point Park University Amicus Brief for the AAUP

Page 11: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate Model “Expansion of the administrative hierarchy, which exercises

greater unilateral authority over academic affairs.” “University administrators increasingly are making decisions

in response to external market concerns, rather than consulting with, relying on, or following faculty recommendations.”

“Decision-making is increasingly made unilaterally by high-level administrators who are driven by external market factors in setting and implementing policy on such issues as program development or discontinuance, student admissions, tuition hikes, and university-industry relationships.”

—Point Park University Amicus Brief for the AAUP

Page 12: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate Model “Faculty have experienced a continually

shrinking scope of influence over academic matters…Faculty loss of influence over programmatic and other academic matters reduces faculty influence even in their individual academic course content and research.”

—Point Park University Amicus Brief for the AAUP

Page 13: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Corporate Model There “are embedded structural changes that favor

top-down decision-making authority by university administrators responding to market concerns, rather than a collegial process of consultation and consensus-building over academic affairs…“One outcome of this institutional shift is a growing conflict between university administrations and faculty over unilateral actions taken by administrators either without consultation with faculty or overriding faculty governance bodies’ recommendations.”

—Point Park University Amicus Brief for the AAUP

Page 14: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

How Many Administrators Does it Take to Run this Place? The Chronicle of Higher Education Lists 289

types of Senior Executives and Chief Functional Officers

Page 15: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Administratium “The heaviest element known to science was recently

discovered by investigators at a major U.S. research university. The element, tentatively named administratium, has no protons or electrons and thus has an atomic number of 0. However, it does have one neutron, 125 assistant neutrons, 75 vice neutrons and 111 assistant vice neutrons, which gives it an atomic mass of 312. These 312 particles are held together by a force that involves the continuous exchange of meson-like particles called morons. Since it has no electrons, administratium is inert. However, it can be detected chemically as it impedes every reaction it comes in contact with.”

Page 16: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Administratium “According to the discoverers, a minute amount of

administratium causes one reaction to take over four days to complete when it would have normally occurred in less than a second. Administratium has a normal half-life of approximately three years, at which time it does not decay, but instead undergoes a reorganization in which assistant neutrons, vice neutrons and assistant vice neutrons exchange places. Some studies have shown that the atomic mass actually increases after each reorganization.”

Page 17: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Administratium “Research at other laboratories indicates that

administratium occurs naturally in the atmosphere. It tends to concentrate at certain points such as government agencies, large corporations, and universities. It can usually be found in the newest, best appointed, and best maintained buildings.”

“Scientists point out that administratium is known to be toxic at any level of concentration and can easily destroy any productive reaction where it is allowed to accumulate. Attempts are being made to determine how administratium can be controlled to prevent irreversible damage, but results to date are not promising.”

—William DeBuvitz The Physics Teacher January 1989

Page 18: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Kent State University

Page 19: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Division of Business and Finance

8/10/2012

Page 20: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President
Page 21: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Responding to the Market: What Do Administrators Get Paid E. Gordon Gee President, Ohio State University, October

2007–Present Total Compensation (2011): $1,992,221 “Since returning to Columbus as the university’s president in October

2007, the 68-year-old Gee has pulled in $8.6 million in salary and compensation, making him the highest paid CEO of a public university in the country.”

“But his expenses—hidden among hard-to-get records that the university took nearly a year to release—tally nearly as much: $7.7 million.”

“Those records show Gee stays in luxury hotels, dines at country clubs and swank restaurants, throws lavish parties, flies on private jets and hands out thousands of gifts—all at public expense.”

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education & Dayton Daily News

Page 22: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Compensation for PresidentsName Total Compensation Position

E. Gordon Gee $1,992,221 Ohio State University

Michael D. McKinney $1,966,347 (Partial year) Texas A&M University system

Graham B. Spanier $1,068,763 Pennsylvania State University at University Park

Lee T. Todd Jr. $972,106 University of Kentucky

Mary Sue Coleman $845,105 University of Michigan system

Kent R. Hance $757,740 Texas Tech University system

Francisco G. Cigarroa $751,680 University of Texas system

Robert H. Bruininks $747,955 University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

John C. Hitt $741,500 University of Central Florida

Charles W. Steger $738,603 Virginia Tech

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 23: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Salaries for AdministratorsSenior executives and chief functional officers DoctoralChief executive of system/district $480,000 Executive assistant/chief of staff for chief executive of system/district $154,800

Chief executive of single institution $392,150 Executive assistant to chief executive of single institution $130,391

Executive vice president/vice chancellor $302,500 Secretary of institution $168,830 Chief academic-affairs officer and provost $281,162 Chief research officer $234,600 Chief technology-transfer officer $165,600 Chief business officer $236,022 Chief administration officer $210,810 Chief financial officer $210,250 Chief investment officer $218,000

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 24: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

More Salaries for Administrators

Senior executives and chief functional officers DoctoralChief planning officer $154,898 Chief budget officer $131,064 Chief planning and budget officer $173,102 Chief legal-affairs officer $198,005 Chief human-resources officer $154,067 Chief information officer $200,000

Chief physical-plant/facilities officer $155,000

Chief accounting officer/comptroller $139,966

Chief health-professions officer $541,419

Chief administrator, hospital/medical center $566,733

Chief student-affairs/life officer $194,056 Chief admissions officer $112,217

Chief enrollment-management officer $160,750

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 25: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Even More Salaries for AdministratorsSenior executives and chief functional officers DoctoralChief external-affairs officer $210,000

Chief development officer $239,120

Chief public-relations officer $162,400

Chief development and public-relations officer $239,798

Chief audit officer $121,056

Chief diversity officer $149,524

Median Salary $196,031

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education and author’s calculation

Page 26: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Growing Inequality Between DisciplinesDiscipline 1980-81 2009-10Fine arts: visual and performing -8.80% -12.40%Education -4.00% -4.30%Foreign language and literature 0.90% -4.10%Communications -3.30% -3.20%Philosophy 2.30% 2.10%Library science -1.50% 3.60%Mathematics 7.60% 7.20%Psychology 5.00% 8.90%Physical sciences 7.70% 12.90%Social sciences 4.80% 16.80%Health professions and related sciences 20.30% 18.90%Engineering 8.10% 25.20%Computer and information sciences 13.40% 28.40%Economics 13.90% 41.20%

Business administration and management 11.40% 50.90%

Law and legal studies 33.20% 59.50%

Source: Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 27: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Pay Gap Between Public & Private Universities

Percentage Gap Public v Private Independent Doctoral

Pcentage Gap Public v Religiously Affiliated Doctoral

1986-87 2011-12 1986-87 2011-12

Professor 17% 34% 5% 10%

Associate 9% 23% 5% 9%

Assistant 7% 25% 2% 8%

Instructor 16% 29% 22% 34%

Lecturer 2% 21% -7% 4%

Source: AAUP Salary Survey

Page 28: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Source: The Common Fund & Author’s Calculations

Page 29: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Delta Cost Project, NCES & Author’s Calculations

Page 30: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Source: National Center for Education Statistics

Page 31: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

National Report on Administrative Costs in Higher Education: Goldwater Institute and Administrative Bloat

But unlike almost every other growing industry, higher education has not become more efficient. Instead, universities now have more administrative employees and spend more on administration to educate each student.

In short, universities are suffering from “administrative bloat,” expanding the resources devoted to administration significantly faster than spending on instruction, research and service.”

Source: No. 239 I August 17, 2010: Administrative Bloat at American Universities: The Real Reason for High Costs in Higher Education. http://www.goldwaterinstitute.org/

Page 32: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

National Report on Administrative Costs in Higher Education: Delta Cots Project

“The share of spending going to pay for instruction has consistently declined when revenues decline, relative to growth in spending in academic and student support and administration. This erosion persists even when revenues rebound, meaning that over time there has been a gradual shift of resources away from instruction and towards general administrative and academic infrastructure.”

Source: Trends in College Spending, 1998-2008. Released July 8, 2010. http://www.deltacostproject.org/

Page 33: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Revenues, Expenses & Change in Net Assets at Public Four-Year Universities

Year Total Revenues Total ExpensesChange in Net

Assets Margin2002 $278,400,000 $295,500,000 $(17,100,000) -6.1%

2003 $296,500,000 $295,000,000 $1,500,000 0.5%

2004 $317,600,000 $308,800,000 $8,800,000 2.8%

2005 $333,100,000 $323,100,000 $10,000,000 3.0%

2006 $352,900,000 $341,700,000 $11,200,000 3.2%

2007 $382,900,000 $362,800,000 $20,100,000 5.2%

2008 $394,500,000 $396,400,000 $(1,900,000) -0.5%

2009 $386,200,000 $412,600,000 $(26,400,000) -6.8%

2010 $447,100,000 $428,700,000 $18,400,000 4.1%Delta Cost Data and author’s calculations

Page 34: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

What are the Consequences?

Page 35: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

How Decision Are Made “[A] Cornell University faculty senate

committee report in 2007 recounts a series of administration decisions made without adequate consultation with the faculty senate, including the creation of a new faculty of computing and information science, the reorganization of the division of biological sciences, and the creation of a for-profit distance learning corporation.” —Point Park University Amicus Brief

Page 36: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

How Decision Are Made “At Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in 2006, the

Board of Trustees ordered the Faculty Senate to revoke its amendment to expand Senate membership to include clinical faculty. Following the Rensselaer President’s rejection of the Senate’s request to convene a joint committee to resolve the issue, the Provost unilaterally suspended the Faculty Senate for failing to comply with the Board of Trustees’ order.”

—Point Park University Amicus Brief

Page 37: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Program Discontinuance State universities in Louisiana will eliminate 109

programs and consolidate 189 others into new programs or concentrations within existing majors, the state Board of Regents announced on Wednesday as it decided the fate of 456 “low-completer” programs it had flagged for review. The cuts include foreign-language majors on a number of campuses

In 2010, Southeastern Louisiana University eliminated its undergraduate French major, dismissing its three tenured professors with a year's notice—and then offering one of them a temporary instructorship.

Page 38: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Program DiscontinuanceAuburn U. Trustees Eliminate 6 Programs“Auburn University's Board of Trustees voted this month to cut six degree-granting programs, including a doctorate in economics that the university's president and a faculty review committee wanted to keep…The 7-to-3 vote in favor of cutting the economics program infuriated many professors and one trustee, who argued that the board should have abided by the president's recommendation.”

Page 39: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Program DiscontinuanceMore Than 70 U. of Northern Iowa Programs Face Elimination or Overhaul“Among the programs being considered for elimination, all of which have produced an average of fewer than seven graduates over the past five years, are several degree programs in the languages, chemistry, computer science, and the earth sciences, according to an administrative document that the newspaper obtained. The university’s faculty members have been protesting their lack of involvement in the budget-cutting process and last week voted no confidence in the institution’s president and provost.”

Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 40: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Program DiscontinuanceA University Plans to Promote Languages by Killing Its Languages Department“Last month, a year and a half after Mr. Maxwell took over the presidency of the Des Moines institution, the Board of Trustees voted to get rid of Drake's foreign-language program and the eight tenured and tenure-track professors and seven part-timers who teach in it.”

Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 41: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Searches “AAUP Criticizes Michigan State U. for Not

Listening to Faculty” “Student-Affairs Job Goes to Wife of

Bowling Green's President” “Regents Broaden Presidential Search at

Texas A&M Without Faculty Input, Drawing Criticism”Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 42: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Curricular Changes CUNY’s Pathway to Whatever

“As chair of the University Faculty Senate — a body chartered by the Trustees — to deal with cross campus curricula issues, I can state clearly that the process by which this core was developed did not reflect any campus or university wide elections and involvement of faculty with experience in general education.” 

Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 43: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Dumping Faculty Governance New President and Faculty Tangle at U. of the District

of Columbia “Just a month after becoming president of the University of the

District of Columbia, Allen L. Sessoms is locked in a battle with the institution's faculty senate, which he wants to shut down and replace with a new forum of students and faculty and staff members.”

After Professors Unionize, Miami-Dade Community College Abolishes Faculty Senates

Union In, Governance Out Faculty governance at Akron, some say now, was gutted, and

without a word of debate.”

Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 44: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Dumping Faculty Governance Tennessee State U. Disregards Faculty Senate's Vote to

Retain Its Leader “Tennessee State University's administration is disregarding a

Thursday vote by the Faculty Senate to retain its chairwoman, whom the university's president had previously declared removed from the job.”

A Professor at Louisiana State Is Flunked Because of Her Grades “Kevin R. Carman, dean of science at Louisiana State

University at Baton Rouge, decided to pull a senior professor, Dominique G. Homberger, from an introductory biology course this semester because many of her students were failing.”

Chronicle of Higher Education

Page 45: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Dumping Presidents New Statements on Ouster of Virginia President

“The Council of Chairs and Directors released a letter blasting the way events have transpired. The letter said that these academic leaders were "very pleased" with Sullivan's "superb" leadership, and that they were stunned by her ouster, and frustrated by the lack of faculty knowledge of the reasons behind the board's action.”

State Higher Ed Board Votes to Dismiss U. of Oregon President “Oregon's Board of Higher Education voted unanimously to cut short

the presidency of Richard Lariviere at the University of Oregon, despite impassioned pleas from faculty and staff members and students at a highly contentious board meeting Monday.”

Inside Higher Ed

Page 46: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Affordability Gap

The College Board & Bureau of Census

Page 47: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President
Page 48: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Crushing Debt for Students

Page 49: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The College Board

Grants and Loans Millions $ 2010=100

Page 50: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The College Board

Average Aid per Full-Time Equivalent Studentconstant 2010 $

Page 51: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The College Board

Percent of Need Based Aid

Page 52: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Are We Doomed? Returning to the Schultz article, he concludes

the corporate model has now collapsed Predicts rather pessimistically that the next

business model will negate “the democratic function of higher education that existed since World War II”

De-emphasizing liberal arts in favor of professional education

Page 53: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Are We Doomed ? The pessimistic view in the Schultz article

misses the fact that contradictory forces have always existed in American higher education. Ruling elite in our society The working class majority

Page 54: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Contradictory Nature of Higher Education Higher education was central in defending

both religious and secular values central to the preservation of capitalism

Somewhat later, as science and technology became more important, the idea of higher education as vehicle for providing “practical training” also emerged

Page 55: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Education as a Force for the Common Good

Others (e.g., Thomas Jefferson) have seen higher education as the great equalizer, a vehicle for educating citizens and the “common good.”

Page 56: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Era of Expanding Access to Higher Education During the period leading up to World War II, most scientific

research and the innovation that drove American industrial might occurred in private research labs

Bell Labs, Dayton Engineering Laboratories Co. (DELCO), Battelle Memorial Institute).

Only after WWII, with the onset of the Cold War, did universities became centers for research.

The GI bill first opened college admissions to the unwashed masses. The elite universities all opposed the bill; they thought that helping

ordinary people who had been drafted go to college would dilute the pool of college students with mediocre students.

However, hundreds of thousands of veterans were returning to the US with little prospect for employment, and left-led unions of the CIO were pushing a social agenda, so the GI bill was enacted.

Page 57: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Expanding Access & the Dewey Model The big expansion of access to college, however, came

in the 1960s Increased funding for public higher education Urban universities Community colleges

Greater access to higher education was a component of the reform era that began in the 1950s Civil rights Women’s rights Antiwar movements

Page 58: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Social Upheavals of the 1960s The social upheavals of this era:

Greater access to college Medicare and Medicaid Clean Air and Clean Water Acts and the EPA OSHA Greater income equality

The “Dewey model” was a facet of the of mass movements for social justice and equality

Page 59: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

The Death of the Reform Era & Corporatization The death of the reform era by the late 1970s

and rise of the corporate university Part-time faculty have replaced tenure line

faculty, undermining both academic freedom and shared governance

These changes must be seen as part of the broader neo-liberal attack on organized labor and the achievements of the 1950s-1970s reform area

Page 60: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Fighting Back Changes in higher education do not occur in a

vacuum If there is any hope of reversing the

deleterious effects of corporatization on higher education, it is in faculty and academic professionals aligning ourselves with the labor movement and the broader movement for social justice

Page 61: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Fighting Back Strengthen Existing Chapters on Campus

Have a membership drive on campus at least once a year

Make office visits to get faculty to joint AAUP Every chapter should have a website and the

national AAUP should provide a template for the website. Have a presence on social media i.e., Facebook and

Twitter Use the website to communicate with faculty with an

online newsletter and links to other AAUP chapters.

Page 62: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Fighting Back Use the AAUP salary data to create a

comparison with your peer institutions

Put IPEDS data on your site to show how much your institution is spending on instruction

Page 63: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Fighting Back Build alliances on campus with students, parents

and unions on campus Think about contacting alumni who have a stake

in the institution’s reputation Build alliances with community organizations

including K-12 teachers Work to make your state conference more

effective Build linkages with other higher education

unions by participating in CFHE

Page 64: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Fighting Back Get involved in politics

See if it makes more sense for your chapter or state conference to be a 501c(6)

Conduct voter registration drives on campus each year

Your chapter or conference may want to endorse candidates, particularly for state offices, based on where they stand on issues that relate to higher education

Mobilize members to work on legislative initiatives

Page 65: Rudy Fichtenbaum, President

Presented at the 2012 Governance Conference

www.aaup.org Rudy FichtenbaumDepartment of EconomicsWright State UniversityDayton, OH [email protected]