Higher Ed's Chase After Money: I Put My Alma Mater on The Do Not Contact List
If the university were a close friend, you would start ducking it. That's because it doesn't stop putting the muscle on everyone, not just alumni and the wealthy, for money. My mother, a cleaning lady residing in a bad part of pre-gentrified Jersey City, New Jersey, would receive pleas for donations. As an adult, I put my alma mater on the do not contact list. I warned about legal action if any communications got through. That chase after money, as The New York Times documents, has gotten higher education's leaders, at all levels from president to professors to administrators in a dental school, in trouble. Emails disclose they sucked up to Jeffrey Epstein. That gush might have been authentic, that is an assumption they were buddies, or what the job requires, that is gladhanding with deep pockets. The elephant in the room is this: Why can't higher education become cost-efficient like public companies. It's heavy with administrative manpower. Provides money-losing ...