INFLATION IN HIGHER EDUCATION

Auteurs-es

  • David Riesman Harvard University

Résumé

If one reads about the plight of our mental hospitals, our prisons, our inadequate welfare, and our other generally-starved public services, one sees that, by contrast, higher education has been the secular cathedral of our time. However, all such institutions are "service industries," and one characteristic of service industries is that with more resources, production does not necessarily rise; it may even fall. Indeed in general, as academic salaries have risen, teaching loads have dropped (which of course does not necessarily mean that less work is being done). While the boom market for Ph.D.'s may be levelling off in the United States (if not in Canada), academic institutions have had to offer increasing amenities to Ph.D's in shortage fields in order to recruit and retain them.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

David Riesman, Harvard University

David Riesman, of Harvard University is author of the modern classic, The Lonely Crowd (Yale University Press, 1950). Dr. Riesman developed the present paper from an address entitled "The Collision Course of Higher Education," which he gave to the American College Personnel Association in Las Vegas, March, 1969.

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Publié-e

1970-04-01

Comment citer

Riesman, D. (1970). INFLATION IN HIGHER EDUCATION. Revue Des Sciences De l’éducation De McGill, 5(001). Consulté à l’adresse https://mje.mcgill.ca/article/view/6736

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