Magic City Morning Star

Forum | Wiki | Advertising | RSS Feed | About Us 

Last Updated: Jan 6, 2009 - 12:30:45 PM 

Millinocket, East Millinocket, Medway, and all of Maine!
Staff Login
Donate towards our web hosting bill!

Front Page 
  News
  -- Local
  -- State
  -- National
  Community
  -- MCAC Notes
  -- Maine Elks
  -- Maine Grange
  Business
  -- AAM
  -- IRS News
  -- NFIB
  -- USBIC
  -- Win at Work
  Education
  -- History
  Health
  -- Psychology Now
  Tech Notes
  Entertainment
  -- Comics
  International
  -- R.P. BenDedek
  -- Steven Shamrak
  -- Kenneth Tellis
  Sports
  Outdoors
  Features
  -- D. R. Crews
  -- J. G. Fabiano
  -- James Feudo
  -- M Stevens-David
  -- Down the Road
  -- Laura on Life
  -- Words of Mind
  Christianity
  -- Ken Christian
  -- Mark Oaks
  Obituaries
  Today in History
  Maine Politics
  -- Susan Collins
  -- Michael Michaud
  -- Olympia Snowe
  Opinion
  -- Editor's Desk
  -- Guest Column
  -- Average Joe
  -- Eyes in the Woods
  -- Scheme of Things
  -- Thomas Brewton
  -- Bernard Chapin
  -- Stephen Crockett
  -- Michael Devolin
  -- Tom DeWeese
  -- Ed Feulner
  -- Syndi Holmes
  -- William Jud
  -- Jim Kouri
  -- Alyce Maragus
  -- Michael Roache
  -- Julie Smithson
  -- Nicholas Stix
  -- Paul Streitz
  -- J. Grant Swank
  -- Nathan Tabor
  -- Doug Wrenn
  -- Tony Zizza
  Letters
  Agenda 21
  Book Reviews
  -- Old Embers
  Notices
  Archive
  Discontinued


As Maine Goes
Restore The Republic - The Home of the Freedom Movement!
www.rockymountaintrail.com
Alliance for the Separation of School and State

State

Cost per Degree: Measuring Inputs and Outputs at Maine's Public and Private Colleges
By Maine Heritage Policy Center
Jan 6, 2009 - 12:27:45 PM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

PORTLAND -- The Maine Heritage Policy Center, a Portland-based public policy think tank, has released the second publication in a new series dedicated to Fiscal Sanity in Maine. The new paper, "Cost per Degree: Measuring Inputs and Outputs at Maine's Public and Private Colleges," introduces a new way of analyzing higher education performance and efficiency in Maine and suggests possible cost saving reforms.

"Too often, discussions surrounding higher education policy in Maine revolve around how much more money is needed each year, as opposed to how the money already allocated is being spent and what is being accomplished," said Stephen Bowen, director of the Center for Education Excellence at The Maine Heritage Policy Center. "I don't believe the State devotes enough attention to the outcomes, to what we are buying for the vast amounts we are spending."

The Center's newest report analyzes the cost-per-degree granted for public and private colleges across Maine. By taking overall spending and dividing it by the number of degrees granted by each college and university, adjusted to account for the various kinds of degrees, the Center was able to develop a new way of looking at higher education performance and efficiency in Maine.

The Center found, for instance, that Maine's smaller public universities and colleges have lower per-degree costs. "This goes against what we're always told, which is that the smaller schools are less cost-effective," noted Bowen. "Our data seems to suggest that it is the big schools that have high non-degree spending. Legislators should look into this."

Additionally, the Center found that as the state's budget woes have continued, the state's University and Community College systems have become more cost-effective. "Per-degree costs actually dropped over the period studied" said Bowen. "These systems are to be congratulated for the work they've done to improve efficiencies."

Data from the report also indicates that Associate's degrees were less costly on a per-degree basis at the colleges of the University of Maine system than they were at the Community College system, and that a number of private colleges in Maine have lower per-degree costs than some of Maine's public colleges.

"Every widget manufacturer knows how much it costs to produce a single widget," adds Tarren Bragdon, chief executive officer of The Maine Heritage Policy Center and co-author of this new study. "Maine's higher education institutions should work to figure out what it costs to produce a graduate with a college degree."

"In tough budget times, policymakers need to take a hard look at what campuses and colleges are efficient and if and how the taxpayer may be subsidizing less productive and more costly degree programs. Our cost per degree research provides a way to begin that analysis and focus any reform efforts," Bragdon continued.

The complete research document, which contains detailed tables and maps, an explanation of the methodologies, key initial findings and recommendations for added research, is available now at this link: www.mainepolicy.org/library/resources/126.pdf.


© Copyright 2002-2009 by Magic City Morning Star

Top of Page

State
Latest Headlines
Fee for Reinstatement of a Suspended Driver's License Set to Increase Effective July 1st
TABOR NOW Chair: "Politicians Will Never Have Enough"
National Organization for Marriage to Join Maine Marriage Coalition
Fort Knox Needs Park Day Volunteers
Spring Flood Potential Near Normal - For Now

Animal Den - Gift Shop for Animal Lovers!
A Dinosaur of Education - a blog by James Fabiano.
Buy Alvina's book now with PayPal
Buy The Call of Katahdin from Amazon.com
Wysong Foods - Pets and People Too
1-800-PetMeds
Buy Weapon in Heaven from Amazon.com
Different products for unique babies!
Save on Outdoor Gear at the Outlet
Altrec Logo: Free Shipping
Caribou Coffee Company

Google
 
Web magic-city-news.com