Thread regarding University of Phoenix layoffs

New report finds that student debt and low-wage faculty labor are rising faster at state universities with the highest-paid presidents. Today's

New report finds that student debt and low-wage faculty labor are rising faster at state universities with the highest-paid presidents.

One Percent at State U Report CoverState universities have come under increasing criticism for excessive executive pay, soaring student debt, and low-wage faculty labor. In the public debate, these issues are often treated separately. Our study examines what happened to student debt and faculty labor at the 25 public universities with the highest executive pay (hereafter “the top 25”) from fall 2005 to summer 2012 (FY 2006 – FY 2012). Our findings suggest these issues are closely related and should be addressed together in the future.

Since the 2008 financial crisis, executive pay at “the top 25” has risen dramatically to far exceed pre-crisis levels. Over the same period, low-wage faculty labor and student debt at these institutions rose faster than national averages. In short, a top-heavy, “1% recovery” occurred at major state universities across the country, largely at the expense of students and faculty.

The student debt crisis is worse at state schools with the highest-paid presidents. The sharpest rise in student debt at the top 25 occurred when executive compensation soared the highest.

As students went deeper in debt, administrative spending outstripped scholarship spending by more than 2 to 1 at state schools with the highest-paid presidents.

As presidents’ pay at the top 25 skyrocketed after 2008, part-time adjunct faculty increased more than twice as fast as the national average at all universities.

Washington Post - please explain this Camden?

At state schools with the highest-paid presidents, permanent faculty declined dramatically as a percentage of all faculty. By fall 2012, part-time and contingent faculty at the top 25 outnumbered permanent faculty for the first time.

Average executive pay at the top 25 rose to nearly $1 million by 2012 – increasing more than twice as fast as the national average at public research universities.

http://www.ips-dc.org/reports/one_percent_universities

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| 451 views | | 4 replies (last May 23, 2014) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+vGTbOuv

4 replies (most recent on top)

For profit schools are vocational training, not universities. They are exorbitant too.

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Post ID: @4ive+vGTbOuv

It's a shame that state institutions are following the for-profit model. University of Phoenix has chosen to be about short-term profits rather than innovation and social justice. It could be different, but it would require a different sort of leadership.

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Post ID: @18Id+vGTbOuv

Camden, just come work for UOP and give up this fight. The US Government is a peace of any on the take. Quit buying into the nonsense they perpetuate.

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Post ID: @qDZ+vGTbOuv

This is why CamdenKid is so passionate about this site he makes less money that most of. University of Phoenix is hiring. You don't have to work for a shitty state school anymore.

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Post ID: @o63+vGTbOuv

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