Goodness gracious: The higher education system in the United States is not broken; we need a new system.
And if you don't think we need a new system, then you should read The Inequality Machine: How Colleges Divide Us by Paul Tough.
Before reading this book, I already knew that our higher education system favored the wealthy and connected. Just watch Operation Varsity Blues to see how the rich have gamed the admissions process. But after reading it, I now realize that these same inequities dominate not just the admissions process but all phases of the college experience: from applying all the way through graduation and beyond.
Tough lays out an irrefutable case in his book that colleges allow the rich get richer while the poor get poorer. The hope of achieving upward mobility through a college degree is just a dream that enrollment managers sell to keep their tuition revenue stable.
It's a pretty dark conclusion especially from a personal standpoint as my children will soon enter the college admission process. Yet it is hard to argue with the facts that Tough lays out:
- Both rich and poor students, who attend the same colleges, achieve similar levels of success. However, rich and poor students are not attending the same colleges: the rich are attending the most elite schools while the poor are not.
- Many outreach programs to level the playing field have been successful, but on such a small scale that the results are difficult to measure.
- The College Board has marketed its efforts to make test prep more equitable yet there has been little change in the fact that SAT scores go hand-in-hand with income, education and race of the parents.
- Even if admitted to elite colleges, lower income students and students of color feel isolated and alone. The culture of many elite colleges fail to support lower income or racially diverse student bodies.
- As much as colleges profess equity and inclusion, they still need to admit a large proportion of wealthy students in order to make the university solvent.
- Graduation rates for students of color and low income students pale in comparison to white or wealthy students.
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