Fortune | FORTUNE 10月17日 00:41
高校投资回报率受关注
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近年来,由于高学费、学生贷款飙升和就业市场低迷,公众对高等教育的信心急剧下降,保守派还提出了意识形态方面的担忧。现在,各大学正努力向学生证明其价值。借鉴商业世界的术语“投资回报率”,美国各大学的广告中随处可见这一概念。一系列新的排名根据大学提供的财务利益对校园进行评分。科罗拉多州开始每年发布关于大学经济回报的报告,德克萨斯州现在将其纳入对社区学院纳税人资金的计算中。大多数学士学位仍然值得投资,但人们越来越认识到,并非所有学位都能带来高薪,甚至一些看似不错的选择也变得风险更大,因为毕业生面临近年来最严峻的就业市场。

📌 近年来,公众对高等教育的信心因高学费、学生贷款飙升和就业市场低迷而急剧下降,保守派还提出了意识形态方面的担忧,各大学正努力向学生证明其价值。

📈 借鉴商业世界的术语“投资回报率”,美国各大学的广告中随处可见这一概念,一系列新的排名根据大学提供的财务利益对校园进行评分。

🎓 大多数学士学位仍然值得投资,但人们越来越认识到,并非所有学位都能带来高薪,甚至一些看似不错的选择也变得风险更大,因为毕业生面临近年来最严峻的就业市场。

💰 新的分析显示,70%的近期公立大学毕业生在10年内可以期待正回报,这意味着他们在十年内的收入将超过典型高中毕业生的收入,超过其学位的成本。

👪 对于想知道大学学费如何才能收回成本的家庭来说,这是一个关键问题,更多的学生正转向技术学校或手工艺,而放弃四年制大学。

🎓 教育部长琳达·麦马汉曾质疑需要四年学位,她赞扬那些为高中生提供职业培训的项目。

🌍 美国高等教育一直在处理投资回报率的两个方面——学费成本和毕业生收入,随着出生率下降,各大学正在争夺越来越多的大学年龄学生。

📚 许多私立学院近年来已降低其标价,以更好地反映大多数学生实际支付的费用,这有助于解决可负担性问题。

👥 确保毕业生找到好工作更为复杂,一组大学校长最近在盖洛普的华盛顿总部会晤,以研究公众对高等教育的民意调查。

🏫 各大学正努力弥合与就业市场的差距,但这是一个持续不断的挑战,联邦政府几十年来一直在努力解决这个问题,从奥巴马总统政府时期开始。

📊 北卡罗来纳州立法者下令对全州公立大学学位的财务回报进行2023年研究,发现93%的学位产生了正回报,这意味着毕业生预计在一生中赚取的比没有类似学位的人更多。

📈 各大学正逐渐意识到这类数据对学生及其家庭的重要性,北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校的校长李·罗伯茨在采访中说。

👥 在不确定的时期,学生甚至更加关注——我应该说这是正确的——他们的就业前景将如何,因此我认为各大学和学院真的应该向学生及其家庭提供这些数据。

Public confidence in higher education has plummeted in recent years amid high tuition prices, skyrocketing student loans and a dismal job market — plus ideological concerns from conservatives. Now, colleges are scrambling to prove their value to students.

Borrowed from the business world, the term “return on investment” has been plastered on college advertisements across the U.S. A battery of new rankings grade campuses on the financial benefits they deliver. States such as Colorado have started publishing yearly reports on the monetary payoff of college, and Texas now factors it into calculations for how much taxpayer money goes to community colleges.

“Students are becoming more aware of the times when college doesn’t pay off,” said Preston Cooper, who has studied college ROI at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. “It’s front of mind for universities today in a way that it was not necessarily 15, 20 years ago.”

Most bachelor’s degrees are still worth it

A wide body of research indicates a bachelor’s degree still pays off, at least on average and in the long run. Yet there’s growing recognition that not all degrees lead to a good salary, and even some that seem like a good bet are becoming riskier as graduates face one of the toughest job markets in years.

A new analysis released Thursday by the Strada Education Foundation finds 70% of recent public university graduates can expect a positive return within 10 years — meaning their earnings over a decade will exceed that of a typical high school graduate by an amount greater than the cost of their degree. Yet it varies by state, from 53% in North Dakota to 82% in Washington, D.C. States where college is more affordable have fared better, the report says.

It’s a critical issue for families who wonder how college tuition prices could ever pay off, said Emilia Mattucci, a high school counselor at East Allegheny schools, near Pittsburgh. More than two-thirds of her school’s students come from low-income families, and many aren’t willing to take on the level of debt that past generations accepted.

Instead, more are heading to technical schools or the trades and passing on four-year universities, she said.

“A lot of families are just saying they can’t afford it, or they don’t want to go into debt for years and years and years,” she said.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon has been among those questioning the need for a four-year degree. Speaking at the Reagan Institute think tank in September, McMahon praised programs that prepare students for careers right out of high school.

“I’m not saying kids shouldn’t go to college,” she said. “I’m just saying all kids don’t have to go in order to be successful.”

Lowering college tuition and improving graduate earnings

American higher education has been grappling with both sides of the ROI equation — tuition costs and graduate earnings. It’s becoming even more important as colleges compete for decreasing numbers of college-age students as a result of falling birth rates.

Tuition rates have stayed flat on many campuses in recent years to address affordability concerns, and many private colleges have lowered their sticker prices in an effort to better reflect the cost most students actually pay after factoring in financial aid.

The other part of the equation — making sure graduates land good jobs — is more complicated.

A group of college presidents recently met at Gallup’s Washington headquarters to study public polling on higher education. One of the chief reasons for flagging confidence is a perception that colleges aren’t giving graduates the skills employers need, said Kevin Guskiewicz, president of Michigan State University, one of the leaders at the meeting.

“We’re trying to get out in front of that,” he said.

The issue has been a priority for Guskiewicz since he arrived on campus last year. He gathered a council of Michigan business leaders to identify skills that graduates will need for jobs, from agriculture to banking. The goal is to mold degree programs to the job market’s needs and to get students internships and work experience that can lead to a job.

A disconnect with the job market

Bridging the gap to the job market has been a persistent struggle for U.S. colleges, said Matt Sigelman, president of the Burning Glass Institute, a think tank that studies the workforce. Last year the institute, partnering with Strada researchers, found 52% of recent college graduates were in jobs that didn’t require a degree. Even higher-demand fields, such as education and nursing, had large numbers of graduates in that situation.

“No programs are immune, and no schools are immune,” Sigelman said.

The federal government has been trying to fix the problem for decades, going back to President Barack Obama’s administration. A federal rule first established in 2011 aimed to cut federal money to college programs that leave graduates with low earnings, though it primarily targeted for-profit colleges.

A Republican reconciliation bill passed this year takes a wider view, requiring most colleges to hit earnings standards to be eligible for federal funding. The goal is to make sure college graduates end up earning more than those without a degree.

Others see transparency as a key solution.

For decades, students had little way to know whether graduates of specific degree programs were landing good jobs after college. That started to change with the College Scorecard in 2015, a federal website that shares broad earnings outcomes for college programs. More recently, bipartisan legislation in Congress has sought to give the public even more detailed data.

Lawmakers in North Carolina ordered a 2023 study on the financial return for degrees across the state’s public universities. It found that 93% produced a positive return, meaning graduates were expected to earn more over their lives than someone without a similar degree.

The data is available to the public, showing, for example, that undergraduate degrees in applied math and business tend to have high returns at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, while graduate degrees in psychology and foreign languages often don’t.

Colleges are belatedly realizing how important that kind of data is to students and their families, said Lee Roberts, chancellor of UNC-Chapel Hill, in an interview.

“In uncertain times, students are even more focused — I would say rightly so — on what their job prospects are going to be,” he added. “So I think colleges and universities really owe students and their families this data.”

___

The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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高校投资回报率 高等教育 学费 学生贷款 就业市场 学士学位 职业培训 数据透明度 联邦资金 工作技能
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