Looking To Study Engineering in College? Check Out What Colorado Has to Offer You!

Interested in studying engineering in college? The state of Colorado offers some great choices for you. Listen to Nate Wright, Director of Marketing and Recruiting for the School of Engineering and Computer Science, from the University of Denver as he talks about your different options.

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Feed It Or Starve It? Higher Education Funding in Colorado and Beyond

By nearly every measure, the citizens of Colorado provide less funding to their higher education system than most other states. This fact is sometimes embarrassing for someone who has devoted his career to higher education to see how little it seems to be valued.
Then again, what’s to value? As an editorial in last Saturday’s Rocky Mountain News (one of two Denver newspapers of record) pointed out, the funding crunch has not led higher education institutions in Colorado to restructure, revamp, or retool. They have not become more efficient nor more effective then in the past, when the state budget was more generous to our state-funded colleges and universities.

There has been little (and usually no) talk of restructuring, or ramping up productivity, of eliminating marginal or duplicative enterprises or programs. There is little talk of doing things differently.
In an era of transforming change in many private industries and even such huge sectors as health care—an era when such normally risk-resistant public entities as urban school districts are actually restructuring themselves—higher education seems a universe apart. And not only in Colorado. Across the nation, despite costs that in most years have escalated faster than inflation, higher ed’s message remains mostly a one-word mantra: more.
Apparently the present model by which universities organize themselves and deliver services is optimal. Among this nation’s major institutions, they alone have seemingly found the sweet spot from which they must never budge. Or at least that is the impression they often give outsiders.>

The News could have gone on to say that some of the greatest innovation, the best education, and the best values in education actually are in our private colleges and universities. While there are a few “public Ivies” (Michigan, Virginia, North Carolina, Berkeley, to name a few), some of our largest, most expensive public universities are nothing more than massive education factories, with enormous class sizes, little educational supervision, low academic standards, and poor retention and graduation rates.
That universities abhor making decisions to eliminate “marginal or duplicative enterprises or programs” is clear. Why does Colorado Mountain College, for example, have three residential campuses? Why must Metropolitan State College of Denver, which is primarily a commuter college, have NCAA competitive teams? Why do we have decent undergraduate music programs in this state at Fort Lewis College, University of Colorado-Boulder, and University of Northern Colorado? Do taxpayers need to support all three? Do we really need more than one or two universities in Colorado that offer Ph.D. programs in the humanities or social sciences?
And who makes the decisions in academia? One could argue that no one makes any decisions. But in fact, the monkeys run the academic zoo. Professors become department heads and deans and provosts and presidents. Scholars prefer ideas to action. They value the life of the mind, and enjoy using other people’s money to fund their pastime. They are not managers. Outside of business school professors, most professors do not have any training or experience in running an enterprise, delivering value, or earning profits (I know because I was one of the monkeys, not so very long ago). Their decision-making models are collaborative, not hierarchical. Decisions are referred to endless committees, and management structures make the Federal Government seem streamlined and efficient by comparison.
One of the problems is that neither the public, nor the higher education institutions themselves, really debate whether we should try to be excellent in every discipline, or whether we should focus public dollars in areas where the public good is more easily discernable. Is it, for example, a “public good” to fund a comparative literature department to award doctorates to experts on Proust? Is that “good” equivalent to the “good” of funding medical research? Or is it publicly-gooder to provide general education courses and actually teach our next generation? One can argue that these are all “good”. But which more compellingly embodies the public interests? While I did read Proust in college (a private one, I hasten to add), and I love good literature, I would say that Colorado could do without a doctoral program in comparative literature. Them that wants Proust can go to a private college.
Regardless of my opinion, why aren’t we having these discussions, as a public? It’s clear that the leaders of higher education in Colorado are refusing to engage in these tough choices. As the Rocky says, all the universities want is more, more, more.
No more.
Frankly, state legislatures across America are right to put the screws to our public system of higher education, especially to our four-year, comprehensive, public universities. (As an aside, I actually think our two-year colleges are much more efficient and lean and effective, and they respond much more nimbly to market demands, generally speaking, than four-year institutions). Without significant external pressure, without increased demands for accountability, without meaningful measures of quality and effectiveness, our public higher education system will remained mired in the Middle Ages.
Let them compete in the marketplace, just as our excellent private colleges and universities do. Heck, professors in private institutions are no less steeped in the life of the mind than their peers in public institutions. Let professors compete individually for grants and contracts and sponsored research. Let them demonstrate the value of their educational services. Would Adams State and Western State survive if it were not for state funding? Do we really need comprehensive universities—with Master’s and doctoral programs—in both Colorado Springs (UCCS) and Pueblo (CSU-Pueblo)? Heck, I could argue that we could completely eliminate most doctoral programs in the humanities and social sciences in Colorado, and be no worse off educationally or economically speaking than we are today. (Pick up any issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education if you don’t believe that his country has a surplus of boneheads with doctorates—yours truly among them!)
However, if there are particular public goods that we, as a citizenry, feel are necessary to support, then let the taxpayers put up the money and let the state institutions (or maybe even the private ones! ack! heresy!) compete for it. Which among them has the best proposal? Which is better qualified to pursue the research or carry out the program? Don’t just dole out money to each institution just because it somehow deserves to exist.
My advice to Colorado college presidents: ask not for what you think you deserve, but for what you clearly merit.
Mark Montgomery
Higher Education Policy Wonk
Montgomery Educational Consulting

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Denver Post Article on College Admission

A front page article in last Sunday’s Denver Post is headlined,

College admission gets dose of sanity:
Counselors say most kids get into their first-choice school despite anxiety

True enough. The whole admissions process is pretty insane, which is why so many students and their families in the Denver area are turning to independent counselors for assistance in alleviating the pressure.

But there were some snippets from this article that I thought I would share.

In the past decade, the ranks of some private counseling services have doubled, college marketing budgets are up 50 percent and the number of students applying to 12 or more colleges has more than doubled.
While the number of slots at colleges remains relatively stagnant, the echo-baby-boom surge of seniors peaks next year at 3.3 million. The percentage of those kids going to college returned to an all-time high of 67 percent in 2004, up from 62 percent in 2001.
And yet a growing sanity movement among counselors, higher-education analysts and college admissions officers now rails against application anxiety that reaches levels of academic hypochondria.
“Collectively, we have robbed students of their senior year,” says Lloyd Thacker, an education writer who has campaigned to get 65 universities to stop ranking their peers in the oft-purchased, much-maligned U.S. News & World Report survey. “There’s a diversity of interests beginning to realize something is wrong.”

(If you’d like to read more that I’ve written about the US News ratings and other data reporting systems, go here and here).

“What if all health care coverage focused on the Mayo Clinic and the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center?” asked Scott Jaschik, editor of the magazine Inside Higher Ed. “It’s not as if they don’t matter, but very few people will get cured at the Mayo or Sloan-Kettering.”

The article also has a neat graph that shows the factors students use in choosing a college:

These are, indeed, the primary reasons for choosing a college, and it does my heart good to know that most kids are like my clients–they are looking for a school, not a country club or a way to pad their list of accomplishments. It is, really, all about finding the right fit.
The article goes on:

More than 80 percent of the nation’s 2,500 four-year colleges accept more than half the students who apply. The average acceptance rate among all schools, even when the formidable H-Y-P axis is included, is 69 percent.
More than two-thirds of college freshmen still report they are attending their first-choice school. Of those at their second choice, half report they were accepted at their first- choice school but did not attend because of financial-aid or other reasons.
The portion of students applying at a dozen schools or more remains tiny at 2.2 percent; the median number of applications per student in 2006 was four.
High-quality teachers and students as measured by test scores and degrees have trickled down to a far broader group of schools than the Ivy Leagues, Stanford, Duke, MIT, and the liberal Ivys such as Amherst and Wesleyan. For example, U.S. News & World Report ranks the University of Washington 42nd on its list of top 50 national universities; 84 percent of freshmen were in the top 10 percent of their high school classes. And yet Washington accepts 68 percent of applicants.
The message here is that parents and students need to relax more and worry less. There is a good college that fits there interests, abilities, and aspirations. We just need to look beyond the elite or “brand name” colleges and consider what are the attributes of a college that will make a student happy and successful.

This is what independent college counselors do. We alleviate stress and worry, and help families enjoy the process of selecting and applying to colleges.
Mark Montgomery
Independent College Consultant

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