October, 2009


31
Oct 09

Phoenix again

Just to follow up on this: looks like things might not be going so well for the parent company of the University of Phoenix:

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating how Apollo books revenue, the company said Oct. 27. Apollo recorded a charge of $80.5 million to cover costs it expects to pay to settle a lawsuit alleging that it violated federal student recruitment rules. Profit in the quarter ended Aug. 31 fell 60 percent largely because of that charge.

Why would one want to see U Phoenix and it’s associates fail? Well, for one thing, it doesn’t generally graduate its students:

While Phoenix has succeeded in drawing students, most don’t graduate, leaving them without degrees and often burdened by loans. Only 8.9 percent of Phoenix students without prior college experience complete a degree in six years, including 5 percent of those who attend classes online, according to the National Center for Education Statistics, in Washington.

Apparently the governing lesson of the institution profiting from the financial crisis (through the unemployed attempting to return to school) is much the same as the lesson of the crisis itself:

Tom Corbett, a former director of online enrollment at Phoenix who provided an affidavit in the lawsuit, said in an interview that the school’s recruiters were like brokers peddling subprime mortgages.

“The University of Phoenix’s management culture is fueled by greed, the same as the housing scenario,” Corbett said. “There was no emphasis on the student’s actual values, goals, background, experiences.”

Of course, it’s hard to convincingly regulate these problems out of free market finance. On the other hand, there’s been a commitment to not for profit post secondary ed in the US for generations. Surely things like this just don’t need to happen.


31
Oct 09

Research funding in Canada by institution

A helpful rundown here of where the money is in Canadian research universities. Nothing terribly surprising (the rather low figures appear to me to represent only total individual government grants).

However, it’s interesting to be reminded nonetheless that there is–rightly or wrongly–a pecking order. A quick look at the original source indicated that  it’s pecking order with a pretty stark degree of stratification. Across 50 schools, the most funded received about 150 times more than the least. So, as you fill out those SSHRC forms, don’t imagine that your address doesn’t matter.


30
Oct 09

“I am a Leninist… This is why I support Obama.”

So says the resident court jester of the contemporary academy, Slavoj Žižek in a recent interview. Žižek seems to pay the kind of lip service to democracy that reactionary conservatives pay to rights:  something great, so long as you like the outcome:

“We shouldn’t fetishise democracy – after all, you can have democratic elections where the majority votes for a rightist populist, and when it does, you have the right to treat the government as illegitimate. I don’t think that this formal electoral procedure should be taken as equalling legitimacy.”

I’m not sure I’d want to see a serious attempt to justify that claim. In any case, these are Zizek’s politics of week: fluent, fuid, mad, engaged and engaging. Take them at face value at our own risk. He concludes with a charming–and alltogether lovely–anecdote about theory itself:

Žižek tells me a story about a friend of his going to meet Noam Chomsky, the “most influential public intellectual” in America. “My friend told me Chomsky said something very sad. He said that today we don’t need theory. All we need to do is tell people, empirically, what is going on. Here, I violently disagree: facts are facts, and they are precious, but they can work in this way or that. Facts alone are not enough. You have to change the ideological background.
“I’m sorry,” Žižek says, ending the anecdote with a cackle. “I’m an old-fashioned continental European. Theory is sacred and we need it more than ever.”

Of course, if you let the ideas out to play, you won’t get the kind of Marxism Žižek is after. But, then, that might be just what he intends.


30
Oct 09

Pollsters

FiveThirtyEight has a nice discussion up about funny poll results. Case in point: NJ gubernatorial election polls, in which live interviewer-based polls show the incumbant leading and automated talking-to-a-robot polls show the opposite, with a difference large enough to be statistically significant.

Nate Silver has some interesting and insightful explanatory speculation to along with it. Hitch is, of course, is that it’s, well, speculation. I don’t think we do a lot of IVR polling in the academy, but it’s nonetheless an interesting commentary on interviewer bias, cooperation bias, or, well something. Not being able to pin down the something is, of course, what makes this any of statistical research a tricky business.


29
Oct 09

Hey Jude

For all you rat choice kids out there… a quick tour of “Hey Jude”:

Should you need something a couple of decades more recent, see here.


29
Oct 09

Broke

Is your university broke? Well, apparently one can still maintain a pretty solid balance sheet providing post-secondary ed in the private sector. Apollo Group, the parent company of the private, for-profit University of Phoenix has announced that its revenues are up 24% over the last year.

The same day the U.S. Labor Department announced the loss of more than 500,000 jobs in December and a 7.2 percent unemployment rate, Apollo Group reported blowout earnings for its fiscal 2009 first quarter that ended Nov. 30. It reported earnings of $180.4 million or $1.12 per share vs. $139.9 million or 83 cents per share in the year-earlier period.

Nothing like kicking a guy when he’s down AND making a buck at it.


28
Oct 09

Out of Print

Sometimes, when faced with excess rhetoric, it’s nice to see some hard data. Sometimes, however, it’s just depressing. US newspaper circulation statistics, reflecting changes over the last year:

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL — 2,024,269 — 0.61%
USA TODAY — 1,900,116 — (-17.15%)
THE NEW YORK TIMES — 927,851 — (-7.28%)
LOS ANGELES TIMES — 657,467 — (-11.05%)
THE WASHINGTON POST — 582,844 — (-6.40%)

DAILY NEWS (NEW YORK) — 544,167 — (-13.98%)
NEW YORK POST — 508,042 — (-18.77%)
CHICAGO TRIBUNE — 465,892 — (-9.72%)
HOUSTON CHRONICLE — 384,419 — (-14.24%)
THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER — 361,480 — N/A

Andrew Sullivan reflects on the numbers: “They are not signs of an industry as we have known it in trouble. They are signs of it ending.”


28
Oct 09

With adminstrators like these…

… who needs a dictatorial state? Academic staff at St Petersburg State U have been ordered to submit for adminstrative approval all documents to be sent abroad for publication, for grant applications, and so on.

The move is putatively intended to bring the university in line with security regulations introduced in the early 1990s to prevent nuclear smuggling an the like. It is, however, directed as much at the social sciences and humanities as anything else.

The change is noteworthy, in part because it is being introduced at the prestigious institution where President Dmitri A. Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin studied law, and where Mr. Medvedev taught for nine years.

But some on the faculty are complaining that the new vision is authoritarian. In the spring, after the dean of the journalism school sharply criticized the rector’s policies, the president of the university filed charges against her, alleging libel and embezzlement. Students picketing in her favor were arrested.


28
Oct 09

Laws for higher education

Not laws in the legal sense, but laws in the laws-of-physics sense; predictive ones, the ones we social scientists purport to discover from time to time. Here, not for the first time, are a selection of well informed laws about us. My favorite:

The first thing a committee member says is the exact opposite of what she means (“I’d like to agree with everything the vice-chancellor has just said, but…”; or “with respect”…; or even “briefly”)”

This could not, of course, be more true.


27
Oct 09

Downfall parody of Downfall parodies

Perhaps this was inevitable–a meta-parody of Downfall bunker scene parodies:

I suspect this bears out some subset of Godwin’s law, but I’m at a loss to pin it town.


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