Why did the White House abandon college rankings?
Critics protested the White House's attempt to rank universities based on 'costs and outcomes,' but the College Scorecard website聽still promises to help applicants find the bottom line.聽
Critics protested the White House's attempt to rank universities based on 'costs and outcomes,' but the College Scorecard website聽still promises to help applicants find the bottom line.聽
In his weekly address this Saturday, President Obama introduced the revamped College Scorecard website, meant to help prospective university students 鈥渋dentify which schools provide the biggest bang for your buck.鈥 After more than a year of planning, however, the new site鈥檚 mountain of data (171 megabytes, all told) is missing its most buzzed-about feature: rankings.
Head-to-head rankings, such as those compiled by U.S. News and World Report, which posted the 2015 installment just last week, tend to invite controversy. Critics accuse the magazine of sending parents, high-schoolers, and college deans into a frenzied keeping-up-with-the-Joneses contest each fall, their obsession over debatably superficial numbers leading to real consequences for student learning and debt.聽
But as most skeptics acknowledge, ratings themselves aren鈥檛 the problem; unhelpful metrics are. On most popular lists, the same small club of elite schools jostle with each other, fighting over a one- or two-place difference, yet they serve a聽minuscule聽percentage of the聽country鈥檚 college students.
鈥淭hink of these top colleges as high-end luxury cars,鈥 writes New America Foundation Senior Policy Analyst Ben Miller in a debate piece on university rankings (sponsored, interestingly enough, by U.S. News themselves). 鈥淵ou're already guaranteed a better vehicle than 95 percent of all drivers, so beyond price considerations, the relative differences are largely cosmetic.鈥
The White House has made it a priority to provide real solutions for the rest of America鈥檚 students, and has long planned to publish more 鈥淐onsumer Reports-style鈥 rankings, as NPR described them, focused on student outcomes like income and debt load. In addition, the White House has laid out an ambitious, $60 billion plan to make two-year community colleges or technical schools 鈥渁s free and universal as high school," a proposal that faces an uphill battle in Congress.
Although community colleges are 鈥渢he workhorses of higher education,鈥 enrolling nearly half of all post-high school students, their graduation rates are abysmal: Only 25 percent finish in three years, and, on average, those who do finish take five years to do so, according to a 2010 海角大神 Science Monitor editorial.
In light of these statistics, Obama hoped to create what Mr. Miller calls a 鈥渂uyer beware鈥 system. But universities, some of which already refuse to participate in the U.S. News rankings, immediately protested that measuring all of their diverse missions, student bodies, and resources with a single measuring stick would not accurately capture each campus鈥檚 value, or lack thereof. While some schools鈥 objections seem to carry students鈥 best interests at heart, observers like Paul Glastris, who oversees an alternate ranking at the Washington Monthly, point out that keeping some of this information in the dark plays to schools鈥 advantage, as well.聽
College Scorecard won鈥檛 tell you whether Princeton is better than Yale, but it does highlight schools which stand out in particular categories: 鈥23 four-year schools with low costs that lead to high incomes,鈥 for example, where the selected 23 are displayed in alphabetical order, rather than by ranking.
Applicants who know what matters most to them 鈥 total cost, loans, income, size, etc. 鈥 can customize the site鈥檚 metrics to create a personalized de facto ranking system. So long as that鈥檚 the case, the Scorecard may well serve its original purpose, as explained by under secretary of education Ted Mitchell to The Chronicle of Higher Education: 鈥減ublic accountability.鈥澛
Expenses, selectivity rates, financial gain: these, and a bevy of other indicators, can all be boiled down into Scorecard statistics. What's harder to capture is how much a student will, or won't, learn.