Overpriced higher education
“Most of the methods of [residential colleges and universities] have become hopelessly obsolete. Probably over half of the universities in the world will disappear quickly over the next thirty years,” wrote Sir John Templeton in 2005 in his last memorandum. As 85 percent of college graduates move home with their parents and confront the reality of paying off huge student loan debts, I wonder how many of them would agree with the global investing pioneer.
Today’s college graduates were still in high school when Sir John made his prediction. Titling his memorandum “Financial Chaos,” Templeton prophesied about tectonic financial changes, including the collapse of the housing market, the demise of residential college education, and the rise of electronic education. He predicted 90 percent of education would one day be delivered electronically.
Why? As with all bubbles, Templeton knew that residential higher education was overpriced due to artificial high demand created by a glut of cheap financing. No doubt he saw that students’ ability to pay loans would wane just as the economy collapsed and cheap electronic education would begin to slay the campus dinosaur.
Residential education will not go away completely. The best colleges will survive. Employers will have a say in which ones make the grade—human resources departments will hire the most competent graduates among residential and electronic colleges regardless of the source of their sheepskins.
Certainly, many HR departments already understand what a recent college graduate—now graduate school student and undergraduate teaching assistant—reported to me last week:
“[T]he mental capacity demonstrated by my students this past semester shocked me. I don’t think any of them are honestly dumb, but they lacked the ability to reason through ideas. Determining whether a simple argument form was valid or invalid was an extremely difficult task for them. They would not have been able to survive the first week of my [Grove City College] symbolic logic class.”
These students paid too much for the value they received from their residential university. Sadly, the marketplace increasingly will punish graduates from this institution. Fewer jobs will be forthcoming for them. And fewer high school graduates will enroll at their alma mater as they seek out better residential colleges and cheaper forms of online education.
Although it was written six years ago, parents and high school students should read Sir John Templeton’s last memorandum. Its wisdom lives on.

















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back to top15 Comments to “Overpriced higher education”
I have long wondered about this…how long will parents (and their young adult children) play along with this ruse of borrowing tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars…for what? Medical school I can see…not much else. College has become big business in it for profit and greed as far as I can see. I look forward to the collapse of the whole system and its replacement with something truly of educational value and substance.
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The one thing worse that the high cost of higher educaion is the (in too many cases) extend of damage and harm done to young minds and lives by that extremely expensive “education.”
It often takes 20 years of living with reality to dismantle that damage.
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Higher education seems to exist for the instructors, not the students. One of my teachers in college said “We get paid way too much…Make us work for it.” The child of the college president got his tuition free. The president of a nearly bankrupted university makes more in a year than our prime minister.
Meanwhile, at my school, they stayed within the budget by scrimping on the wrong things. The labs were underequipped; the ratio of students to instructors was too high; and the bookstore overcharged for the textbooks.
Education must work for the student. Apprenticships need to come back for trades. Teacher’s college should go back to one year for public school instruction. Even medical school could take some trimming; medical students start their clerkship in hospitals by the second year anyway, and nurses do not need to have a Bachelor’s degree.
Academics, historians, scientists, etc. used to gain their degrees later in life; why does everyone have to have a Masters by 25 and a Ph.D by 30 these days? The high volume of degrees being awarded leads to a devaluing of educational merit. To quote W.S. Gilbert, “If everyone is somebody, then no one’s anybody.”
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When I graduated in 1976, there were two Summa Cum Laude’s in the entire graduating class.
I went to a graduation at the same school in 2011 and there were four “Summa Cum Laude’s” before we got out of the “A”s. I stopped counting at some point after that. I can’t count that high (smile).
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Modern college education is a BUSINESS which sells LIES to a largely gullible parents target market. Pay a LOT–NO JOBS–and political correctness and race issues have lowered academic standards to the gutter or ghetto level so inferior minds can be rubber-stamped thru the mill. College Education IS the greatest consumer RIPOFF in modern times…Oh, Wait, I almost forgot poor bernie madoff–he and his family are better at the CON…Been to ivy league and lots more…so you can take it or leave it. I’ve learned by long experience that most people reject and avoid the TRUTH cause it would require killing their sacred cows–long-held personal beliefs they’ve adopted by default. Good Luck, You’re Gonna Need It, seamus out.
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Good info on Girl Scouts–in case you don’t know, if you are a Christian…we are at WAR with the evils of modern culture. No joke. Most civilians cannot accept this reality. seamus out.
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The tuition keeps climbing up at nearly all universities. It outpaces the rate of inflation. Do the university admin types ever get hauled before committees to explain why costs keep going up? Not that I can see.
We need more accountability from the big pricey universities.
Online ed has already been a huge boon to homeschoolers. I myself value the interaction with another person in the conventional brick and mortar classroom, but a math PhD told me he can’t see any reason why you couldnt get a math degree online.
And I’ve already shared the story of Dr T. He spend a vast sum and moved from one university to the next before finally earning a PhD in an arcane sub-branch of chem for which he can now find no job.
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A good grasp of logic is required for all subjects. Moreover, a good grasp of logic would counteract assinine political or advertising claims.
It should be taught in at least the high school if not jr high grade levels.
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Higher education can be a racket. In most cases, purchasing higher education needs to be done the same way one approaches purchasing a car. Decide what you need from the purchase and then do your research. Frosh especially are a giant cash cow — 1/2 are gone before Christmas and by April only 1/4 remain. In part this is because its hard to judge which student will succeed in a university environment so they take more than necessary but its definitely easy money. To avoid this, spend your undergrad years in an institution which is primary undergraduate and then go to a larger school for professional or graduate (the frosh there will subsidize it). Go to universities that specialize in your interest — don’t study history at an university that specializes in engineering. Avoid programs with no tie to future reality ie combined programs. Also avoid programs which can be covered at community college. The Bachelor of Business Administration is perhaps the best cash cow — for less than 10% of the cost you can get the same education at a community college.
However, I don’t see the university disappearing but you will see programs which have no traditional basis and don’t pay for themselves cut. The local university here recently cut the entire Film History program along with other specific courses or areas of specialization. Yet they expanded the business program.
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Sawgunner — before I started teaching I would have agreed with you but since then I’ve come to the realization that children don’t posses the cognitive maturity for informal logic until the last two years of high school (if ever). Its offered in many Ontario high schools as an elective — called philosophy its mainly concerned with informal logic. The closest I come to that in grade seven is teaching them how to construct an opinion essay (and honestly this year I had very little success)
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I worked at a Christian University for a number of years. They taught Christian business ethics but did not follow them in the department I worked in.
The department had a management change that caused loss of Christian oversight to employ workload and safety. You can’t build more new, high tech buildings without adding additional staff. I would have liked to stay on there but many hours worked off the clock and no additional help even after requesting it three years in a row and offering to take a lower wage. They just burned me out. It angers me to think of the used sink and eye wash I couldn’t get them to install close to chemical barrels. God sees how lower budgets are maintained even when man doesn’t.
I truly believe they give a good education for the money and would have no problem with my grandchild going there. I believe in their mission.
Dear God, please help Christian higher education to not sacrifice Christian ethics to help their finances, in the name of Jesus who is Christ, Amen.
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Post-secondary education is above all a signaling mechanism. As long as it remains one people will continue to pay for college degrees regardless of the actual education they receive. And, to be honest, it’s often in their best interest to do so even when the education is is mediocre at best.
A Harvard degree opens up some doors a degree from Ohio State just doesn’t. Likewise a degree from Ohio State opens up some doors a degree from the University of Phoenix doesn’t. One has to consider the value proposition. What really boggles my mind is when parents/students spend Harvard money to attend schools that really aren’t regarded any more highly than state schools that cost far less.
Harvard might be worth Harvard money. Maybe. Southern Methodist, Tulane and the University of Miami? Not worth Harvard money.
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Buddyglass – good points. As for parents spending Harvard money to send their kids to a lower-label private school, you have to look beyond the stated tuition. You’d have to know what kinds of scholarships the student was able to get. A higher-priced college is often less expensive for the parents than a lower-priced college, due to the presence of better financial aid, especially in the form of scholarships.
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Possibly. But I know parents who’d pay full price to send their kids to a SMU, TCU or Baylor instead paying in-state tuition at UT-Austin. That’s nuts if you ask me. Unless one suppose that a “small school atmosphere” is worth an extra $20,000 per year.
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The information I receive says most of our institutions of higher learning are now more accurately labeled institutions of lower learning. Stories abound of believers in Christ being made fun of in class by liberal professors. They have to be very strong in their faith to stand up the continued onslaught. These schools are determined to produce faithless generations. To thing that most of these schools were started by Christians saddens me. It’s clear how far we have fallen.
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