The Indelible Bonobo Experience

Renaissance Monkey: in-depth expertise in Jack-of-all-trading. I mostly comment on news of interest to me and occasionally engage in debates or troll passive-aggressively. Ask or Submit 2 mah authoritah! ;) !

The more elite a school, the better its alums’ paychecks. The effect also increased over time. Among students who had graduated high school in 1980, those who had gone on to a top private university eventually made 20 percent more than their counterparts from bottom tier public school. For the class of 1972, the wage boost was just 9 percent. (via Atlantic)
..social stratification begins earlier, though..
But studies since have still detected a similar pattern. In 2000, aDepartment of Education report found that, overall, the quality of a college decided 2-to-3 percent of earnings among men and 4-to-6 percent in women — making it less important than how they actually performed in class. But in some cases, the effect was much larger. Men who went to an institution that was one standard deviation better on its quality measures saw their salaries jump 8.1 percent. For women, the boost was 17.4 percent.
One of the best known efforts was by Stacy Berg Dale of the Andrew Mellon Foundation and Alan Kreuger of Princeton, who came to the unexpected conclusion that, in some respects, where you went to college was less important than where you applied.  
Selectivity didn’t matter. Academic siblings ended up making just about the same wages after college regardless of how choosy their school was. In fact, where the students applied, and their final class rank in school, were much better correlated with earnings than their school’s admissions standards. If you were smart enough to get into Yale, or even take a shot at it, you were probably smart enough to earn like a Yale grad. 
Although tough admissions standards didn’t count for much, tuition prices did. Students who went to more expensive schools consistently outearned their peers during life after college. 
In a 2009 paper, Texas A&M professor Mark Hoekstra used a somewhat simpler experiment to try and solve the elite college question. Enrolling at the flagship increased wages by 20 percent, a divide illustrated vividly in the chart below. 
Not all of a college’s graduates will earn the same. A student’s grades, major, and innate talent all make a difference. Professors at the University of Texas at Dallas, University of Tulsa, and Cornell have tried to capture that dynamic in a new working paper that looks at the range of wages earned by students who went to college in Texas between 1996 and 2002.  
So speaking very broadly, better schools yield bigger paychecks. But does that mean they’re always worth the price? Bloomberg Businessweek has teamed up with Payscale, which collects self-reported earnings data from its users, to estimate the return on investment for more than 500 colleges. Topping the list: MIT, with lifetime ROI of about $1.8 million for graduates, or 12.6 percent a year. It’s followed closely by fellow elite engineering school, Cal Tech. 
The one thing they didn’t study: how would taking a photo Mitt Romney style would impact your future earnings?

The more elite a school, the better its alums’ paychecks. The effect also increased over time. Among students who had graduated high school in 1980, those who had gone on to a top private university eventually made 20 percent more than their counterparts from bottom tier public school. For the class of 1972, the wage boost was just 9 percent. (via Atlantic)

..social stratification begins earlier, though..

  • But studies since have still detected a similar pattern. In 2000, aDepartment of Education report found that, overall, the quality of a college decided 2-to-3 percent of earnings among men and 4-to-6 percent in women — making it less important than how they actually performed in class. But in some cases, the effect was much larger. Men who went to an institution that was one standard deviation better on its quality measures saw their salaries jump 8.1 percent. For women, the boost was 17.4 percent.
  • One of the best known efforts was by Stacy Berg Dale of the Andrew Mellon Foundation and Alan Kreuger of Princeton, who came to the unexpected conclusion that, in some respects, where you went to college was less important than where you applied. 
  • Selectivity didn’t matter. Academic siblings ended up making just about the same wages after college regardless of how choosy their school was. In fact, where the students applied, and their final class rank in school, were much better correlated with earnings than their school’s admissions standards. If you were smart enough to get into Yale, or even take a shot at it, you were probably smart enough to earn like a Yale grad.
  • Although tough admissions standards didn’t count for much, tuition prices did. Students who went to more expensive schools consistently outearned their peers during life after college.
  • In a 2009 paper, Texas A&M professor Mark Hoekstra used a somewhat simpler experiment to try and solve the elite college question. Enrolling at the flagship increased wages by 20 percent, a divide illustrated vividly in the chart below.
  • Not all of a college’s graduates will earn the same. A student’s grades, major, and innate talent all make a difference. Professors at the University of Texas at Dallas, University of Tulsa, and Cornell have tried to capture that dynamic in a new working paper that looks at the range of wages earned by students who went to college in Texas between 1996 and 2002. 
  • So speaking very broadly, better schools yield bigger paychecks. But does that mean they’re always worth the price? Bloomberg Businessweek has teamed up with Payscale, which collects self-reported earnings data from its users, to estimate the return on investment for more than 500 colleges. Topping the list: MIT, with lifetime ROI of about $1.8 million for graduates, or 12.6 percent a year. It’s followed closely by fellow elite engineering school, Cal Tech.
The one thing they didn’t study: how would taking a photo Mitt Romney style would impact your future earnings?

Casseroles - Montréal, 24 Mai 2012 (by Jeremie Battaglia)

Protest in Montreal against the rise of tuition fees in Quebec and the new Bill 78.
Every evening at 8pm people meet in the street with their pots and pans and make all the noise they can.
A big thank you to the band Avec pas d’casque and their record label Grosse Boîte.

Tuition fee rallies in Toronto are known as a model of peaceful public coexistence.
Attendees recognize the telltale smell of marijuana in the air, the top-40 music blasted from the back of trucks and the mellow puff-and-pass between demonstrating students.
  • Every year, the Canadian Federation of Students holds a ‘Drop Fees’ rally to let the province know that the country’s highest tuition rates still belong to Ontario and these rates should be reduced. They almost say `please’, such is their eagerness not to offend.
  • Now look at the unprecedented street violence that has convulsed Quebec for over 100 days and almost shut down an entire province. The students have grabbed the country’s attention and refused to let it go as they push their government to reject the proposed $1,625 fee hike to be implemented over five years. More than 2,500 arrests and several injuries later, Montreal’s streets remain paralyzed and demonstrating students have been joined by a growing tag group of supporters and boosters relishing the national attention.
  • So where is Ontario’s Maple Spring? Sandy Hudson says it may well be looming over the horizon. “We’ve watched our allies in Quebec build for two years, and we’re able to mount a huge resistance,” CFS Ontario chairperson Hudson said. “We’re inspired and motivated and we’re tired of government leaders who benefited from a well-funded public education system.”
  • Unionist Sid Ryan agrees. He thinks it’s about time Ontario followed Quebec’s example - but with set boundaries. The Ontario Federation of Labour president points out that the country’s highest tuition fees, largest class sizes and biggest debt load per student all live here. “For those three reasons alone, I believe that the students in Ontario should take a look at what they’re doing in Quebec, and make a decision to protest these punishingly high tuition fees in Ontario, minus any of the violence.”
  • Right now the average undergraduate student debt for a four-year degree is $21,178, according to government statistics from 2009-2010.
  • “The tax breaks are costing the provincial coffers $2.5 billion,” he said. “When Mike Harris was in office, corporate taxes were at 14 per cent. Today they are at 11.5 per cent. The difference in revenues is $2.5 billion on an annual basis.” Even a $1 billion investment into post-secondary education would go a huge way towards reducing tuition fees in Ontario, he adds.

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