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Boosting productivity in US higher education

America’s economic health depends on additional college-trained workers. Some universities are showing how to graduate more students at lower cost.

The United States needs more college graduates. Opinions vary on exactly how many, but McKinsey estimates that the nation will need an additional one million each year by 2020 to sustain its economic health. That would mean increasing today’s annual total—2.5 million—by 40 percent.

To meet this goal, universities and colleges would have to increase their output of graduates by 3.5 percent a year over the next decade. That’s a daunting task for two reasons. First, it would cost an additional $52 billion a year, based on 2008 costs to produce a graduate. Yet many states, plagued by fiscal woes, have recently lowered spending on higher education, a trend that’s unlikely to be reversed. Second, to achieve this increase, colleges would need to enroll many more than 3.5 percent more freshmen each year, because today, on average, only 40 percent of students who enroll go on to graduate.

To meet the target without spending more, colleges would simultaneously have to attract additional students, increase the proportion of them who complete a degree, and keep a tight lid on costs. Gaming the target by lowering the quality of the education or granting access only to the best-prepared students obviously wouldn’t count. Not surprisingly, many people within and beyond higher education say that colleges can’t possibly do all these things at once.

But McKinsey research suggests that many already are, using tactics others could emulate. In fact, the potential to increase productivity across the varied spectrum of US higher education appears to be so great that, with the right policy support, one million more graduates a year by 2020, at today’s spending levels, begins to look eminently feasible. The quality of education and access to it could both improve at the same time.

Good education, good management

How a college manages its resources shows up in its cost per degree, found by dividing the institution’s total annual costs by the number of degrees awarded. The measure sounds simple, but it captures the two key components of higher education’s productivity: cost efficiency and completion rates. Some colleges have a high cost per degree because they produce many graduates, but their overall costs are excessive. Others graduate relatively few students, though keep their costs in check. Some struggle on both counts. Institutions become more productive by increasing graduation rates while controlling overall costs.

 

To understand what makes institutions more productive, McKinsey examined the education and management practices of eight colleges with productivity levels up to 60 percent greater than average, measured by the cost per degree (see sidebar, “About the research”). These highly productive colleges are a mix of private and public, for profit and nonprofit, with more or less competitive entry. All perform highly on measures of educational quality and openness of access, and all belong to the groups of colleges that award associate’s or bachelor’s degrees after two or four years of study, respectively. We chose schools from these groups because they represent the bulk of higher education: similar segments of institutions educate 51 percent of all college students in the United States.

The eight colleges share some organizational and cultural features that facilitate high productivity. These features notably include smooth-running operational and managerial systems, a policy framework that encourages their ongoing improvement, and, above all, leaders and staff dedicated to combining good education and good management. The schools achieve high productivity largely through five strategies: two that increase the number of students completing their degrees and three that keep costs under control.

Helping students to graduate

The eight highly productive institutions design their education systems expressly to help as many students as possible achieve degrees. Indiana Wesleyan University’s College of Adult and Professional Studies (IWU–CAPS), for example, achieves a six-year graduation rate of 65 percent—19 percentage points above its peer average—by constructing clear-cut pathways to degrees and encouraging students to support one another. Early assignments have the dual purpose of helping students get together and learn how they can succeed academically at college, whether on campus or online. With few pathways to a degree, students generally move through the sequence of classes as a single cohort, keeping each other up to the mark.

Similarly, in Florida, Valencia Community College’s three-year graduation rate—35 percent—is 15 percentage points above that of peer institutions, partly because the college provides students with support and tools for planning their path to graduation. It also tailors support to its different student segments and has redesigned support services to improve their quality.

Reducing nonproductive credits

Up to 10 percent of all credits taken by US students are in excess of the number required to graduate. True, such credits may expand students’ minds, but they add cost to a degree. Tracking students’ progress and skillfully intervening when necessary can help reduce that cost. Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU), for instance, has a monitoring system that discourages students from embarking on redundant credits altogether: no bachelor’s graduate at SNHU completes more than 150 credits en route to a degree, while 20 percent of graduates at similar institutions have upward of 150. Better preparation for college work and a policy of allowing transfer students to conserve credits help reduce redundant credits too.

Failed courses and courses from which students withdraw account for an additional 7 percent of all credits taken. Targeted policies can help institutions to cut this waste. Brigham Young University–Idaho (BYU–Idaho) has implemented policies to prevent redundant teaching and learning, including strict guidelines on course withdrawal and academic progress. Partly as a result, BYU–Idaho’s rates of failure and withdrawal are as much as 32 percent lower than its peer average. In addition, BYU–Idaho insists that students gain at least 75 percent of their intended credits each semester or risk suspension. By contrast, many colleges review a student’s rate of credit completion only once a year.

Redesigning instruction

Using new teaching technologies can lower costs substantially and raise quality at the same time. Rio Salado College, in Arizona, substitutes part- for full-time faculty. Western Governors University (WGU), in Utah, uses course mentors—one for academic and one for life-coaching purposes—to augment online teaching materials. Both schools develop “master courses” centrally instead of asking individual professors to create their own material. High-tech teaching systems are understandably controversial, but their results have been verified. Since 1999, the National Center for Academic Transformation (NCAT) has helped 150 institutions make the best use of technology in their teaching. NCAT found that costs at its partner institutions decreased, on average, by 37 percent in redesigned courses. Learning outcomes improved after 72 percent of the redesigns, and the other 28 percent produced learning of a quality comparable to that of traditional formats. NCAT has six alternative redesigns ready and waiting for colleges to introduce.

Technology isn’t the only way to cut teaching costs. More conventionally, BYU–Idaho revamped the academic calendar to include a third (full spring) semester, serving the same number of students as the fall and winter semesters. The college increased faculty pay somewhat but hired only a handful of new staff members. As a result, BYU–Idaho cut teaching costs per student by 32 percent while paying its faculty more than peer institutions do.

Improving efficiency in core support and services

Introducing leaner processes is one way to reduce the cost of core support and services, such as management functions, student services, academic support services, and plant operations. Organizational redesign and better purchasing also help. BYU–Idaho, Rio Salado, and DeVry University, for example, succeeded in bringing down costs in this area by converting paper-based systems to electronic ones, cross-training to eliminate staff downtime, and using self-service online portals to administer financial aid. BYU–Idaho and IWU–CAPS have markedly lower ratios of administrative staff to students than their counterparts, but with no outsourcing of operations. On the contrary, these schools spend less than peers do buying goods and services but pay their staffs as much as or more than peer institutions.

Running noncore services and other operations efficiently and selectively

Top-performing institutions also continually check to ensure that any noncore service and other operation they must offer to fulfill their missions are run efficiently. Many aren’t. Although some noncore services—catering, for instance—generate revenues and are self-supporting, 49 percent of all US higher-education institutions report that noncore-service revenues are too low to cover related costs.

DeVry University, SNHU, and WGU, as part of their effort to control total costs, offer almost no noncore services. Of course, many institutions must offer some, notably research, to fulfill their missions. But even these institutions can drive down costs by paying closer attention to mandatory operations while improving efficiency across all noncore services.

Doing better

Could other schools raise their productivity by adopting these strategies? The good news is that many appear to be using them already. Laying the cost-per-degree yardstick across all US higher-education institutions1 shows an average gap of 34 percent between the most productive quartile and the mean level of productivity. This difference doesn’t exist solely because some types of higher-education institutions—private universities, say—are more productive than others: there are big gaps between the average and the best in every cohort of peer institution. While we don’t know if schools in the highest quartile are using exactly the same tactics as the highly productive eight in our sample, the former too are achieving measurable improvements in all five areas targeted by the five strategies (exhibit).

Achieving one million extra graduates a year by 2020 without any increase in public funding would depend on lowering the nation’s average cost per degree by 23 percent. (This estimate assumes that total tuition revenues rise in line with student numbers but that tuition fees do not rise.) Since a quarter of the nation’s colleges and universities already produce graduates 34 percent more productively than the average, the 2020 target begins to look doable. Although eight colleges can’t represent the breadth of US higher education, the productivity impact of the five strategies we found them to be using suggests that these strategies could play a useful part in meeting the target.

Smarter policy needed

Policy makers can do their bit too. For starters, both state and federal governments could push productivity in higher education further up their agendas. Any higher-education institution aiming to improve its productivity will need to begin by appraising its current performance against reliable benchmarks. Governments should therefore require institutions to collect data on their degree productivity, to signal its significance. States should agree with colleges on standard practices for recording and measuring productivity and publish the data they collect. Without such comprehensive, accessible data, institutions cannot be held accountable for their progress (or the lack of it).

Funders too can draw attention to productivity—for example, by paying colleges to share best practices or introducing competitive grants and results-based financing. But funders should not dictate how better productivity is achieved: creative institutions can improve their performance in different ways, as long as they stick to the goals of helping more students attain degrees at a stable cost while maintaining or raising quality and access.

US living standards could falter unless most US higher-education institutions achieve these goals. Thankfully, today’s most productive colleges appear to be blazing a trail to a future when more Americans fulfill their educational potential at a cost the nation can afford.

About the Authors

Adam Cota is an associate principal in McKinsey’s Miami office, Kartik Jayaram is a principal in the Chicago office, and Martha Laboissière is an associate principal in the San Francisco office.

Notes

1 Represented in the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data Systems (IPEDS) national dataset.

Recommend (32)
  • 6 MAY 2011
    John Rivalsky
    Student
    Ohio University
    Athens, Ohio USA

    ...Schools must be more vocal about their goals, and they should continually ask students what they want to gain from being at school....

    .
    John Rivalsky
    Student
    Ohio University
    Athens, Ohio USA

    Post-secondary institutions could benefit from better communication and cooperation. Schools must be more vocal about their goals, and they should continually ask students what they want to gain from being at school. The problem is that a student who has no motivation will not learn, regardless of the quality of the programs. A student who is passionate about something—it could be anything—will go on to perform great things, even if this student who is passionate is not of top intelligence. Communication is key, and I think administrators and executives could improve the quality of education by developing students with a purpose for the future.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2011
    Alex Drewitz
    Researcher
    ETH
    Switzerland

    ...One might argue that the additional 3.5 percent are possibly more prone to drop out; but this is not a truth for its own sake, and would strongly depend on the method by which you would obtain this increase in...

    .
    Alex Drewitz
    Researcher
    ETH
    Switzerland

    The comment in the second paragraph that, due to drop-outs, college intake has to increase much more than 3.5 percent in order to have the output of graduates grow by 3.5 percent is not overly compelling. In fact, assuming in a first approximation that the additional 3.5 percent would perform equally well as the average student, an increase of 3.5 percent more freshmen is exactly what would be needed for the desired plus of graduates.

    One might argue that the additional 3.5 percent are possibly more prone to drop out; but this is not a truth for its own sake, and would strongly depend on the method by which you would obtain this increase in freshmen.

    .
  • 1 MAY 2011
    Brian Galbraith
    CEO and lead Consultant
    Optimise International (B) Sdn Bhd
    Brunei Darussalam

    ...I...would welcome the more complete picture that would come from a similar article on what the US’s world-ranked universities and institutes are doing to boost productivity and effectiveness...

    .
    Brian Galbraith
    CEO and lead Consultant
    Optimise International (B) Sdn Bhd
    Brunei Darussalam

    I agree with Lin Giralt’s comments. While valuing this article and the work of these vitally important institutions, I, too, would welcome the more complete picture that would come from a similar article on what the US’s world-ranked universities and institutes are doing to boost productivity and effectiveness in teaching, research, and social and economic contribution.

    I’d especially welcome insights on the specific strategies these ‘leading’ institutions are pursuing within the wider community, in terms of economic renewal and new job creation and with respect to what must now be an essential part of their mandate—the preparation of their students for social and economic responsibility and contributions.

    .
  • 30 APRIL 2011
    James Lightbourne
    First Sergeant
    US Army
    Columbia, SC USA

    ...I would rather see a push to produce better quality graduates who can contribute to and lead the US through the next 25 years.

    .
    James Lightbourne
    First Sergeant
    US Army
    Columbia, SC USA

    Producing more graduates is a lofty goal, but I would rather see a push to produce better quality graduates who can contribute to and lead the US through the next 25 years.

    .
  • 30 APRIL 2011
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    Neither employment nor economic growth are valid aims for higher education in any one member-nation of our planet...

    .
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    Neither employment nor economic growth are valid aims for higher education in any one member-nation of our planet in this day and age. Graduates from India’s best institutions routinely look for jobs in the US. Washington could simply issue more visas in relevant categories, or help its young citizens travel abroad to study.

    Concepts of graduation with minimal credits and cost savings by substituting courses developed by full-time faculty with part-time ‘teachers’ dishing out standard fare are certain prescriptions for the irreversible decline in the land of the Ivy League.

    .
  • 29 APRIL 2011
    Abhimanyu Singh
    Director
    Comunics Marketing Services
    Delhi, India

    ...in promoting a higher quantity of graduates by 2020, the quality aspect is neglected or probably hasn’t been given much thought to....

    .
    Abhimanyu Singh
    Director
    Comunics Marketing Services
    Delhi, India

    I think in promoting a higher quantity of graduates by 2020, the quality aspect is neglected or probably hasn’t been given much thought to. Reducing the teacher/student ratio can, for instance, prove detrimental for the students’ learning. Lots of institutes, especially in the coaching and training industry, actually boast about their higher teacher/student ratio, implying higher individual attention. Graduation is fine, but it’s the quality education that makes you employable, or you may see an India-like private-sector education sham in the United States in times to come.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Uday Kumar
    Sr. Director
    The College Board
    Reston, VA USA

    ...These ideas and strategies need to be normalized with some key graduation quality metrics and then benchmarked against some globally leading education systems.

    .
    Uday Kumar
    Sr. Director
    The College Board
    Reston, VA USA

    Thanks for providing some interesting insights. However, I did not see any mention of quality of education provided and learning achieved by the graduates that would come out at the other end of the system. Cost-effectiveness if one thing, but we cannot lose sight of the quality of the outcomes lest we risk supplying graduates who are unable to compete with the rest of the world. These ideas and strategies need to be normalized with some key graduation quality metrics and then benchmarked against some globally leading education systems.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Rob Perhamus
    Instructor
    UCR
    Upland, CA USA

    ...In three to five years, I see no reason why I should not be able to provide high-quality, engaging instruction to 2000-plus students, from home or any location....

    .
    Rob Perhamus
    Instructor
    UCR
    Upland, CA USA

    Good thoughts above, especially about student/course mentoring and design.

    I cannot say that I am a great, nor even good instructor, yet I work at it everyday. From prior work experience, I teach project management, new product development, and international business topics, and mash these topics with “lean” and quality management systems. I apply these processes to provide, faster, better, and cheaper education, with an emphasis on “better.” I am a tech-in-education junkie, a lead user designing education to be better. In three to five years, I see no reason why I should not be able to provide high-quality, engaging instruction to 2000-plus students, from home or any location. That’s 2000 students, considered project tasks, that must each complete so many subtasks (or chunks of knowledge) on a timeline. Of course, many have said online education will take over traditional brick-and-mortar for many years, but it has not happened. The technology adoption curve has been rather slow, but that’s turning upward now, with the addition of a few new tricks.

    My goals are in line with those of Bill Gates, who recently commented that using technology, a $200,000-a-year education should drop not to $20,000 but to $2,000 over the next decade. Sal Khan’s Khanacademy.org is sort of cool, but lacks real-time social-engagement learning, in my opinion. But that is not a big deal to overcome, with a little social grouping and mentoring. Sprinkle in a little personal social media marketing to draw a digital word-of-mouth crowd and we’re off to the races.

    As a Peter Drucker fan, I close with two quotes of his:

    “Thirty years from now the big university campuses will be relics. Universities won’t survive. It’s as large a change as when we first got the printed book. Do you realize that the cost of higher education has risen as fast as the cost of health care? And for the middle-class family, college education for their children is as much of a necessity as is medical care#&8212;without it the kids have no future. Such totally uncontrollable expenditures, without any visible improvement in either the content or the quality of education, means that the system is rapidly becoming untenable. Higher education is in deep crisis.”

    “When a subject becomes totally obsolete we make it a required course.”

    We will see the productivity in education rapidly improve.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Jun Sung Lee
    Student
    Philadelphia, PA USA

    ...Are we trying to create maximum value and minimum costs for a college education, or just the maximum number of degrees?

    .
    Jun Sung Lee
    Student
    Philadelphia, PA USA

    I agree that all of the five methods listed here will decrease the cost per degree and thereby pave the way for higher number of college graduates in coming years. I especially liked the method of offering noncore services selectively.

    Yet I couldn’t also deny the downsides that these measures can produce. For instance, “a monitoring system that discourages students from embarking on redundant credits altogether” clearly prevents personal freedom in choosing and taking various courses. Of course the cost per degree will decrease in this case, but I feel that we are trading off between the value and quality of education and the quantity of college degrees. Are we trying to create maximum value and minimum costs for a college education, or just the maximum number of degrees?

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Kenneth Armitage
    lT Commander
    N/A
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    ...To paraphrase, “It’s employment, stupid!”

    .
    Kenneth Armitage
    lT Commander
    N/A
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    For a few years now—probably since the collapse of the banking and finance systems in 2007-08 and growing national debts and trade deficits—politicians and senior managers have shifted from concentrating on profitability to enhancing economic performance by addressing productivity and national competitiveness and relating it to education and training standards.

    There are numerous websites given over to productivity, all of which concentrate on how to introduce measures to increase the productivity and improve the performance of employees, but there is no mention of what directors and senior management can do to motivate employees through, for example, incentives and enhanced workplace conditions; no mention of how practices and procedures can be improved to encourage people to increase effort; no mention of the paramount importance of investment in research and development and on product, people, and plant; no mention of the importance of science and engineering subjects in the school and university curriculum; and no mention of how useful politicians can or might be in order to reduce barriers to productivity and economic performance.

    However, and as an example, there is little point in producing five million widgets at a cheaper price if there is a market for only 5,000. There is little point in dealing with 500 customers a week if many are unsatisfied with the end product and take their business elsewhere. There is little point in producing more widgets if your sales and marketing people are not “out and about” selling the strengths of your wares. If your widgets are more costly, less efficient, or the standard less reliable than your competitors, you are unlikely to sell more. And if the quality, however you define it, of your product is lower than others then again you will not succeed.

    The fundamental weakness with attempting to increase productivity and competitiveness is the apparent, generally low level of academic ability and professional qualifications that enable and encourage people to make the best use of technology. Somehow the state education system appears to have degenerated to the point where 40 percent of young people are leaving secondary education with few qualifications and even those who go on to study subjects at an advanced level before university are sometimes unable to write and express themselves clearly.

    As for degree-level qualifications, I am reminded of the comment by the Australian satirist, author, and social commentator, Clive James, on the issue of education: “Everyone has a right to a degree in America, even if it is in hamburger technology.” The point is that a degree is only of use to the individual and the nation if there are jobs in a specific area to be filled, but if employment opportunities in that section of business, industry, and commerce have been outsourced, off-shored or exported elsewhere, then where does one find work? To paraphrase, “It’s employment, stupid!”

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Noah Kaufman
    Partner
    Kaufman CPA Firm
    Vienna, VA USA

    ...Maybe the goal should be producing more science, engineering, and medical degrees....

    .
    Noah Kaufman
    Partner
    Kaufman CPA Firm
    Vienna, VA USA

    The article brings up interesting points. Yet, many recent grads have no job, part-time work, or jobs that pay little and require no degree. Maybe the goal should be producing more science, engineering, and medical degrees. We simply don’t need more liberal-arts majors.

    Still, the article demonstrates that for-profit schools can also do a fine job providing a degree.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Guy Higgins
    Principal
    Performance Squared
    Boulder, CO USA

    What the US needs is not more college graduates, but more college graduates who are prepared to contribute to the economy....

    .
    Guy Higgins
    Principal
    Performance Squared
    Boulder, CO USA

    What the US needs is not more college graduates, but more college graduates who are prepared to contribute to the economy. We don’t need people who majored in Lower Elbonian Culture and Smurf Philosophy but can’t add two three-digit numbers without a calculator. We need people with technical knowledge (which includes, doctors, nurses, cognitive behaviorists, behavioral economists, and many others—not just engineers, mathematicians, and classical scientists, as much as we do need those professionals). We also need people with or without college degrees who can be the professional technicians that a technological economy needs. We need people who know how to think and not simply parrot what the talking heads repeat, because they don’t understand either. As a former hiring manager, I am appalled at the inability of so many college graduates to be able to think more than one atom deep on any subject.

    This doesn’t mean we don’t need insightful historians, archeologists and lit majors — just that we don’t need them in the 100s of thousands every year. Too many people go to college to “get an education” and wind up learning little to nothing of value. Producing valueless educations productively is not a very worthwhile goal.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Joel Goldhar
    Professor of Operations Management
    Stuart School of Business, IIT
    Chicago, IL USA

    I agree that universities and colleges must become less expensive and more productive, but the quality of the finished product must also be very high.

    .
    Joel Goldhar
    Professor of Operations Management
    Stuart School of Business, IIT
    Chicago, IL USA

    I agree that universities and colleges must become less expensive and more productive, but the quality of the finished product must also be very high. High-quality education (and training) is a service endeavor, and it is unlikely that this can ever happen “cheaply,” or that individuals will ever be able to pay the full price for a highly effective educational experience. That is why the so-called best schools are either non-profit “charities” or tax-supported public institutions.

    That said, the first step to increased productivity as defined by total cost per degree is a more intensive use of the high fixed costs of university facilities, including administration, staff, and faculty.

    Start with a 12-month academic program resulting in a 3-calendar-year degree. Since the number of staff and administrative positions in most schools outnumbers faculty by a 2-to-1 ratio (or more) and they are on 12-month contracts, the added direct costs would just be the additional faculty time.

    Next, reduce class sizes and have them taught by experienced, full-time faculty who can engage the students in rigorous exchanges, with an emphasis on critical thinking and communication skills as well as the specific subject matter. If the course can be taught in huge lecture halls with online testing of textbook content, then it might as well be totally online and the student should not need to pay tuition for what is essentially a self-taught course.

    Then, rebalance the emphasis on teaching versus research. The quantity of publications does not signal quality scholarly work, even if it is easier to measure. Let most professors teach more and write less. If someone wants to focus mostly on research, they should work for a research institute and teach as an adjunct.

    Finally, recognize that post-secondary education is, at its best, not a “business,” although it can be “managed” for effectiveness and efficiency. However, there are no “stockholders” and universities fundamentally have a social mission rather than an economic one. Again, that is why they are 501(c)(3) organizations. Therefore, there is no excuse to allow them to become overly centralized and top-heavy with non-teaching staff and administration, or to pay “corporate” prices for executive-level talent. While some colleges are larger than many businesses, none are as complex as the Department of Defense, where no senior executive makes more than $200,000 per year.

    In summary, a year-round operation with a shorter calendar to earn a degree, with smaller classes taught by fully engaged and experienced faculty, in a leaner (but not meaner) and more focused organizational sturcture that exists to support learning and scholarship by faculty and students will solve the educational capacity and productivity “problem.”

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Bob Atkins
    CEO
    Gray Associates, Inc
    Concord, MA USA

    ...It would take a great deal of evidence to prove that more data is needed. What we need to do is use the data effectively to manage performance and policy decisions.

    .
    Bob Atkins
    CEO
    Gray Associates, Inc
    Concord, MA USA

    Generally on-point. However, the request for more reporting is far off the mark. All colleges receiving Title IV funds must already report their costs, enrollments, graduation rates, tuition, and a host of other factors. This data is publicly available on Integrated Postsecondary Education System Data (IPEDS), which was likely used to source many of the statistics in this article. It would take a great deal of evidence to prove that more data is needed. What we need to do is use the data effectively to manage performance and policy decisions.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Lin Giralt
    Director
    Lambda International Consultants
    Houston, TX USA

    ...I don’t know if it is really illustrating a pathway to improvement or whether these are merely examples of different strategies to educational differentiation....

    .
    Lin Giralt
    Director
    Lambda International Consultants
    Houston, TX USA

    I have a difficult time interpreting this article. I don’t know if it is really illustrating a pathway to improvement or whether these are merely examples of different strategies to educational differentiation. One of the problems I have is that the educational institutions selected are simply not leading edge or nationally recognized as being top institutions. It appears, rather, that these institutions compete more against community colleges and adult education institutions for students. This is a valid approach, but the most distinguished and leading students prefer to get degrees from highly recognized four-year colleges and universities—the usual suspects.

    For America to maintain economic leadership, I believe an article focusing on what the Harvard’s, MIT’s, and Duke’s of the US are doing would be far more engaging and illustrative than what these meritorious, but not necessarily leading, institutions are doing. Not to put this article down, but merely to suggest that it needs a complement to present a fuller picture.

    .
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