Report: Virginia College Tuition Outpaces Income
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Posted: 11:54 AM Jan 31, 2012
Report: Virginia College Tuition Outpaces Income
RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
Tuition and fees at Virginia's colleges and universities are outpacing the rise in family incomes, and administrative costs also are rising faster than instructional spending.
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January 31, 2012

Tuition and fees at Virginia's colleges and universities are outpacing the rise in family incomes, and administrative costs also are rising faster than instructional spending.

That's according to a study of the state's 15 public and 24 private schools by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, which shows that tuition and fees at 17 schools total more than 40 percent of Virginians' median household income, up from 10 schools in 2004.

The report shows that administrative costs increased by an average of 65 percent at public and 49 percent at private schools over a six-year period that ended in the 2008 fiscal year, the most recent statistics. Instructional spending rose 45 percent for public schools and about 42 percent for private schools.

The ACTA report, the ninth in a series examining states' higher education systems, was sent Monday to trustees overseeing the schools and the governor's office.

Despite Virginia's push to increase degrees in sciences and mathematics, more than a third of the schools in the study don't require any coursework in college-level math, and none requires economics, the report said. Only two universities — James Madison and Regent — require a survey of American government or history.

Colleges may appear to provide a core curriculum because they require students to take courses in subject areas outside their major, the report said. But many of these courses are on narrow or specialized topics, which ACTA said do not count as a true general education course.

Sometimes there are valid reasons driving these costs, such as enrollment increases, said Michael Poliakoff, ACTA's vice president for policy.

"Still, the business of higher education is education," he told the Richmond Times-Dispatch. "We want to underscore that what goes on in the classrooms is what deserves the real focus in terms of new resources."

At a time when the state is seeking to send more students through the higher education system, the study found inefficient use of space among the 15 public institutions. The average weekly use of classroom facilities ranges from a low of 18.2 hours at Virginia Military Institute to 49.4 hours per week at George Mason University's main campus, the report said.

Virginia Commonwealth and Old Dominion universities were deemed strong in efficient use of space.

ACTA was among the advocacy groups that in 2009 pressured Virginia Tech to back off from a proposal that would have linked demonstrated commitment to diversity to faculty advancement. This report was funded with support from the Portsmouth-based Beazley Foundation.

ACTA used data from the U.S. Department of Education, course catalogs and the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia.

SCHEV director Peter Blake said the report is a reminder to pay attention to student learning and efficiency.

But it doesn't take into consideration the upward pressure on tuition resulting from cuts in state funding and "seems to overlook the fact that learning occurs through a breadth of courses and settings," he told the Richmond Times-Dispatch by email.

"The strength of Virginia's system of higher education is based on the diversity of institutional missions, which does not seem to be given due consideration in this report."


Latest Comments

Posted by: Realsville on Jan 31, 2012 at 02:06 PM

Colleges are a Buisness and UVA is sitting on a pile also. UVA staff (not the
Professors and elite higher up's) have not gotten a raise In 5 years to cope with
Inflation and the higher cost of living, yet tuition goes up 6 to 10% annually. There is some coporate greed for ya.

Posted by: Tim Location: C'vl on Jan 31, 2012 at 01:05 PM

Family incomes have barely kept pace with inflation over the past decade. Since unemployment spiked in the recent recession, incomes have NOT kept up with inflation. So it is not just college tuition outpacing income. The cost of living outpaces income. Everybody will have to deal with austerity for many years to pay off over-borrowing. The govt, colleges, and individuals. The one group doing well is business. Most are sitting on a pile of cash right now. But they are not creating jobs, except outside USA. It is all interconnected.