Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much, With a new preface

Colleges and Universities Product Description America is the best in the world. It is also the most expensive. Tuition has risen faster than inflation over the past thirty years. There are no indications that this trend will slow. Ronald G. Ehrenberg explores the causes of this tuition inflation, drawing on many years as a professor and researcher in higher education and the economy as a senior director at Cornell University. With facts and examples. . . More>>

Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much, With a new preface

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5 Comments

1
Monday 18 January 2010 - 10:03 am

Very good knowledge of the constantly rising cost of school. It explains why colleges Upping their fees and act in a manner that is easily understandable hold can. I recommend it for anyone interested in higher education. Rating: 5 / 5

2
Monday 18 January 2010 - 11:56 am

This masterpiece is Ehrenberg in his best and is by far the most important work of the famous and successful career. His most recent work of Ehrenberg replacing previous works well on the issues of college costs and tuition fees. This book explains in detail why Collge expendentially costs have increased over the past ten years. In addition, the text explains, a colorful and respond more thoughtfully, because (In contrast to their corporate counterparts) colleges do not run “efficiently” and / or cost-effective manner. In short, Ehrenberg read analysis and explanation of the rising cost of college tuition for all university administrators, scientists, and prepare the parents, their children to college. Rating: 5 / 5

3
Monday 18 January 2010 - 11:57 am

Insight Ehrenberg is amazing, and the book is full of important and interesting information. As a parent of a college student, I found the book very useful to explain why tuition is rising at an unbelievable pace, because college administrators decisions that make teaching and how to engage (or not) the quality of higher education. It is a great resource for parents, pupils and teachers, all interested in higher education. Kudos to Ehrenberg for a job well done! Rating: 5 / 5

4
Monday 18 January 2010 - 2:17 pm

As a high school guidance counselor I see the immediate value of the book by Ehrenberg. In fact, it is the best book on this subject I have read. There should also be very useful bound for the parents of school children and college administrators. The language is very accessible and the author is the point, clear and concise. This book is a welcome addition to the area, and perhaps the best of its kind Rating: 5 / 5

5
Monday 18 January 2010 - 3:20 pm

Ronald Ehrenberg, his analysis was based on extensive experience as an economist and an administrator working in finance at Cornell University. He manages to successfully manage their own experiences in a school with larger issues of higher education in order to invite genei.O title is somewhat misleading: The book not only for teaching but for each source of revenue and expenditure of a university or college address . Ehrenberg is a highly complex analysis, although in terms that can understand all the attentive reader. This is no small achievement. The anecdotes of experiences at Cornell really make this a fascinating book to read, but not to deprive the general workforce tis.Echo an institution of higher education is not much different from the Cornell more than 20 years and I learned a lot from this book. I would give each member of the faculty and staff at my school in order to better understand the constraints under which all our work – and have a more favorable sense of the challenges ahead. ) Legislators and parents (and students should learn from them. Will it work more than one constituency, the problem perigrafei.Se Unlike other reviewers here correctly, I saw this book at all as an attempt to justify high cost of college, but to explain. Ehrenberg is very clear that many agents for federal policies on financial assistance and the reimbursement of indirect costs of research recalcitrant teachers, the willingness to passages from their own budgets, the increasingly popular college game reviews to reduce shortages responsibility of local activists who distrust in any activity to take profits between them. This includes occasionally even to the guilty. He writes about everything from the problematic combination of voluntary departures and lifelong employment to misconceptions about the cost of Title IX. The chapter about parking only worth the price of the book. Who knows, given how much a car park every year? Read the book and anakalypsete.Enas myth that this book has exploded, that the universities are not competitive. Ehrenberg points out, more precisely, that the universities and colleges a kind of “arms race” for prestige and for the best students and faculty. Not enough brake pressure to reduce prices to increase the cost of this fight. The price of a college education is not fully understood, the impact of financial aid, and education is one of the sectors of the economy is in a position to benefit less than others from increased productivity. It will be interesting to see what the coming years, pressure, since the cost reduction is growing in the field of higher education. This book is an excellent place to understand this proklisis.Exetazontas forward, I have a small criticism. This book was first published in 2000, this revised and a new preface, has in 2002. But based most of the evidence and the debate about the research from the 1990s. College finances are constantly changing, so that some parts of the exam date. For example, the U.S. News and World Report has changed already some of the criteria Ehrenberg criticized here (for example, the report returns), so that analysis of the evaluation results are a bit outdated. I’m sure there are other examples. I hope that we will check again, but perhaps ask for a different book. Rating: 5 / 5



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