The (Un)Productivity of American Higher Education: From "Cost Disease" to Cost-Effectiveness

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Harris, Douglas N.
Goldrick-Rab, Sara

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The authors examine two explanations for why productivity in academic degrees granted by American colleges and universities is declining. First, few popular programs and strategies in higher education are cost-effective, and those that are may be underutilized. Second, a lack of rigorous evidence about the costs and effects of higher education practices intersects with a lack of incentive to use cost-effectiveness to guide decision-making.

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