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Weathering the Storm

‘Free Market’ for Higher Ed

Larry Johnson is a self-described “entrepreneur from hell,” so it’s of little surprise that the University of Cincinnati dean likes the plan for a new budgeting system on campus.

Johnson, dean of the College of Education, Criminal Justice and Human Services, is helping to craft a “performance-based” budgeting model at Cincinnati. The plan, which is being accelerated to address anticipated budget shortfalls, rewards colleges for enrolling more students to generate revenue. On the other hand, colleges that fail to meet agreed-upon revenue goals may have to take budget cuts.

“In a sense, we’re creating a higher ed free market,” Johnson said. “We’re really embracing each program and unleashing its creativity.”

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University of Cincinnati

Nancy Zimpher, president of the University of Cincinnati, says a new budgeting process will incentivize growth.

Creating incentives for revenue growth is not new to higher education, and Cincinnati drew upon models used at Ohio State University and Indiana University. But Cincinnati’s decision to implement a new budgeting process for the entire university by 2009 reflects an important philosophical shift that speaks to the times, according to Nancy Zimpher, the university’s president. Faced with the likelihood of declining state support in a faltering economy, the new plan encourages growth, she said.

“We have to be able to make those cuts, and at the same time we have to be able to grow,” Zimpher said. “So how are we going to do that? I think the way universities have responded to [budget shortfalls] is they’ve just cut. They haven’t thought about the growth side.”

As Johnson explains, deans at Cincinnati have not always seen their total budgets increase when they’ve increased revenues by boosting enrollment, making operations more efficient or securing donations. If a college received a gift to endow a scholarship that was previously covered by institutional funds, for instance, the college would typically lose those institutional dollars once the scholarship was covered by another revenue stream. In short, there could be a disincentive for raising money.

Under the performance-based model, deans could count on keeping more of the money they bring in — without fear of a reduction in institutional support. The performance-based model will give each college a “threshold,” which essentially defines the bare minimum amount of money each college needs to conduct business. If a college’s threshold was $30 million a year, for instance, the college would be able to keep somewhere between 55 percent and 65 percent of any dollars it generated beyond the threshold. The college could use its excess funds to hire more faculty and staff or increase scholarships. The remaining money generated over the threshold would be placed in university coffers and distributed across campus to fund other initiatives.

As with any budgeting process, the devil is in the details. Mary Hall, chair of the Cincinnati faculty, said professors are mostly reserving judgment until those details become more apparent.

“There is just great hesitancy as with any change, and of course you really don’t know until the rubber hits the road,” Hall said.

Different colleges will be given different budgetary goals, but planners are still wrestling with how revenue targets might differ across the campus. There is an acknowledgment, however, that some colleges – by their very nature — are much better positioned to be able to increase revenues than others.

Zimpher said the university will still supplement colleges that are less capable of increasing enrollment, but she noted that some programs may simply be exposed as inefficient and unsustainable through this process.

“We will all have to agree as an institution that there may be some departments that cannot be revenue generating but cannot [cease to] exist in a university environment,” she said.

“[But] do I think that there is a portion of our enterprise that may not be sustained in the process? Yes.”

The new budgeting system is part of a larger series of changes at Cincinnati, including a move from a quarter system to semesters. Outlined in Zimpher’s most recent “state of the university,” the changes also include a concerted effort to reduce courses that may be duplicative, and a potential reduction of the number of credits required for certain majors.

Adjunct Hires

Encouraging colleges to increase enrollment or face potential budget cuts might seem like a recipe for deteriorating quality, but Zimpher assures that won’t be the result of Cincinnati’s new approach. She acknowledged, however, that the university needs to guard against changes that would skew student/faculty ratios or lead to dramatic increases in reliance on adjunct labor.

“You might call those unintended consequences [of this budget model], and I think we want to do our best to maintain the balance between full-time faculty and — I think — our marvelous adjuncts,” she said.

Valerie Gray Hardcastle, dean of the McMicken College Arts and Sciences, said she did not think deans would be lured into increasing adjunct faculty numbers in order to see a short-term increase in revenues.

“If you rely more on adjuncts, that means you have less control over curriculum and quality,” she said. “Then your retention rate will go down, and then you have less dollars in your pocket.”

But Hall, an associate professor of psychology, said a further trend toward adjunct hiring is “absolutely a concern,” even under the current budget model.

“We’ve been concerned that there has been that kind of moving going on already, fewer and fewer positions that are tenured or tenure track positions and more and more positions that seem to be field service positions or adjunct positions,” Hall said.

Currently, 42 percent of faculty at Cincinnati are not eligible for tenure, marking an increase of 8 percentage points of that cohort since 2003-04. The university, which enrolls more than 37,000 students, has a faculty-student ratio of 14:1, and a six-year graduation rate of 52 percent, according to university data.

Year

Total

Faculty

Tenured

or Tenure Track

Non-Tenure Track

Non-Tenure Track

07-08

2270

1311

959

42%

06-07

2284

1406

878

38%

05-06

2264

1473

791

35%

04-05

2161

1487

674

31%

03-04

2084

1380

704

34%

SOURCE: University of Cincinnati

Administrators Reject ‘Corporate’ Label

While the performance-based budget model rewards big revenue producers, administrators involved in developing the plan reject labeling it as a “corporate” approach. Monica Rimai, senior vice president for administration and finance, said the university is considering factors that simply wouldn’t be considered in a pure corporate setting.

“I think the difference has to do with how we define value,” she said. “If Procter & Gamble has some product line that is consistently not meeting revenue targets — profit targets — over some period of time, it will be eliminated … But at a university — and I would dare say at any university — there are certain activities that we always subsidize.”

But Johnson, a dean who supports the changes, notes that the very idea of performance-based budgeting makes some people on campus a little squeamish.

“I’m not going to lie to you,” he said. “We have faculty that are very scared of this, and people who are like ‘Oh my God, have we sold ourselves out?’ But for the most part it’s [viewed as] an empowering approach.”

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Comments

Responsibility should also come with flexibility

This budgeting process has its benefits, which probably do outweigh the costs of transition. However if a division of the university is responsible for retention and recruitment, the role of admissions, marketing, and advising should be altered to address the new decentralized accountability. Should each division be given (or allowed to support) individual marketers, admission officers, and advisors? Should each division be given control of their price (tuition)? The only way you can make them responsible for their revenue stream is to give them some control over their revenue stream.

Not in Cinci, at 8:25 am EST on November 11, 2008

Oh No, Not Again

So, here we go again. After the partial collapse of world economies due to uncontrolled “free” market (which turned out to not be so free), we want to turn that model for “success” on our next generations of leaders. I am sure, that will make us very competitive in the world. In the paraphrased words of Montogomery Scott, “The more they overhaul the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the drain.” An entrepreneurial idea from hell indeed!

Dean Educator, at 9:50 am EST on November 11, 2008

Performance-based budgeting

This is a version of RCM, a type of budgeting that has been around for a while. Advantages include higher levels of transparency. But there are serious disadvantages — at one large university in Philly, for example, which has a modified version of RCM in place, colleges / deans increase revenues by creating more programs and relying on contingent faculty. Revenues are higher, of course, with part-timers. This has also led to an uncaring attitude towards class sizes and enrollments. The challenge lies in encouraging performance without compromising quality.

Anon, at 9:50 am EST on November 11, 2008

Gaming the System

“Performance-based” accountancy schemes such as this don’t “empower,” nor do they produce the kind of efficiencies that “free-market” managers continually promise. The do “unleash creativity,” though, but not in the way this Dean promises. Time and again, what results are creative ways of gaming the system or, if you want to put it in everyday accounting terms, “fudging the numbers.” Adam Curtis’ wonderful documentary, “The Trap,” makes this abundantly clear.

This is bad policy not only for universities but indeed for institutions writ large.

Ted, at 10:15 am EST on November 11, 2008

Good governance matters.

Good governance matters. Can ‘free market’ help good governance?

Hei-hang Hayes Tang, University of Hong Kong, at 11:40 am EST on November 11, 2008

The death of a universities colleges

These are just more of the changes designed to kill the spirit of the university, and literally a few of its colleges. Cincinnati started as an urban university to open higher ed to the citizens of the city. We were one of the last city run universities in the country. Since Zimpher has come in open access has been limited, in fact the college of evening and continuing education has been eliminated. Cutting the university off even more from working adults. The population some would argue the university has been meant to serve. This is just another way to kill parts of the university the administration does not believe are “prestigious” enough for them. Programs they look down their noses at. With all the changes there is an impending death of the college of applied science, which has been part of the city for over 175 years. Originally this was a free standing college, the Ohio Mechanical Institute. Just in the past 4 years we have dropped the OMI title from our name, now we are soon to be no more. The net result of the changes are the students have fewer options. Instead of multiple classes at multiple times, there are just multiple sections meeting all at the same time in huge lecture halls. Isn’t the most effective buisness model one with a 1000 students to 1 prof who is adjunct? All this change is creating a university not for the city but so other can say they work at a “national university". Well at least till the get a better job somewhere else and leave the university of cincinnati in shambles.

UC adjunct, at 11:50 am EST on November 11, 2008

The results of a diminishing work ethics...

A capitalistic system relies on the entrepreneurial drive of its members to thrive. The voids that ail this system are filled by this drive. By utilizing this approach in Higher Education, those who implement this system are relying on the diminishing entrepreneurial drive of faculty and staff. Some administrators view this budgeting system as a scare tactic for faculty and staff with poor work ethics to wake up. Once hardworking faculty and staff, now- like most American citizens- have become stagnate. Instead of pulling sleeves up to work, more and more faculty and staff are pulling them down while still maintaining expectations of equal pay and benefits as those who have maintained a hard work ethic.

A tenure-track faculty member at a Division I, Research Institution had stated, “We are in the business of higher education.” Sequencing the “of” before “higher education” gives possessive attributes to the before-mentioned “business.” Therefore, giving business more focus then higher education. “We” are not in the business of higher education. Our business is to educate. Thus, business, at max, equals education.

The need for budgeting systems similar to RCM have developed similarly to that of accreditation. Higher education institutions have been backed into a corner with no escape, and have utilized such systems to maintain their autonomy. I understand the need for this progression, but I would heed this movement with unwavering eyes. Most RCM systems require institutions to adopt an “all in” approach. It takes substantial resources and time for RCM to become successful. With the focus of an institution’s resources on this capitalistic system, I fear that institutions might corner themselves into adopting a system that views higher education institutions being in the “business of higher education” versus being an institution whose “business IS to educate.”

If we are to maintain our purpose of education, then faculty, staff, administrators, and all of the members of the higher education community must again role up their sleeves.

Jacob Roope, Educator, at 12:20 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Enough is enough, Basta!

Indeed it is interesting to see how much “free market” is part of US culture, almost to blindness. Many people believe everything in human existence is market driven and can best be understood in those terms. I disagree. Higher Education is not a business, it is a social responsibility. It is not here to make money, it is here to increase the knowledge and skills of citizens. It reminds me of a senate representative who implied that he is the employee of the people and he must work hard. I replied he is not my employee, he is the elected representative and his duty is to represent the diverse population in his district; not because he is paid to do the job, but because he was elected and hence has the moral responsibility to do the right thing. We’ve made all social relations into relations of production. I think it is time to Challenger this vision. The double talk of the Republican folks for the last 8 years (at least) should be challenged. Regardless of what the administrators want the public to believe, the proposal is a corporate approach. People assume as truth the idea that academics are bunch of lazy folks sitting on their laurels. The great majority, if not all, of the professors I’ve met in my life as both student and member of the faculty have worked tremendously hard. Many of them choose to not have a family so as to dedicate more time to their jobs. Some others do marry but rarely participate in their children’s lives, and a few others – more recent generations- juggle their desire to be successful academics and teachers with also being successful parent. Perhaps there are a few, who after many years of very intense work, decide in the last 10 years of their employment to slow down; and some do so more than others. However, they do not characterize the great majority of the faculty. Nor are they simply taking a paycheck for no work. They continue to perform even if not at the intense rate they did in their youth. One of the larger implication of this corporate approach to education is this: If undergraduates just want to get a law or medial degree in order to make more money, then law and medial schools will attract more students and bring more revenue. In the process, the Anthropology, Sociology, Classics, and History programs, among others, will slowly perish into oblivion. They will be eliminated from educational programs the same way Geography suffered that fate. The US will be even less able to understand the large world in which it exists. I do wonder how many undergraduates in the US know all the nations in Africa and their significance in their own continent’s political dynamics? Most people did not know where Iraq was, until we went to war. There is value on knowledge beyond its capacity to allow us to get high paying jobs. I rather be an unemployed PhD, than an unemployed illiterate. At the very least, in a democracy I have the knowledge to defend my interests. There are things that society as a whole must provide for, and education is one of them. There are social needs (like water) that must be offered regardless of their profitability. Without water, there is illness, and a plague will affect us all; including the plague of ignorance. We do need to ascertain quality in the education we offer, but the corporate model is not the answer. We can be more creative than that.

Fed up, at 2:40 pm EST on November 11, 2008

corporatization?

This piece is much appreciated as, again, questions of “efficiency” and “productivity” appear to be quite “natural” when discussing higher education, though whether this sort of vocabulary and the thinking encouraged by it are of value or appropriate needs constant scrutiny. The comment by the adjunct on this blog is astute, informative, and needs careful reflection lest we be caught up in a kind of educational Taylorism and fail to understand how “market values” may dictate policies and practices that subvert a school’s original mission and values.

I suspect that for many years all those execs at the big car companies were seen as “productive’ and “efficient” in their sponsorship of gas guzzling vehicles now so hard to sell. Why were there no rewards for true visionaries who understood the realities of sustainability and the need for more fuel efficient vehicles?

Those who wish to explore further questions of the connection or disconnection between the values of “The University” and the “values’ of the marketplace will be interested in next summer’s Society for Values in Higher Education Annual meeting at Elmhurst College (IL) whose theme will be THE UNIVERSITY AND THE MARKETPLACE. Papers are invited. See also: www.svhe.org for further information.

George T. Karnezis, at 2:40 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Jacob Roope

Roll up our sleeves, yes. On whose terms?

Perryville, at 3:50 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Support Services

How does this budgeting model work for student affairs, library, security, finance, plant operations, marketing, etc.?

Joyce Romano, at 4:35 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Open the books

Could we count on administrators to arrange things in the best interest of the public, our public institutions of higher learning would not be in this mess.

What’s really needed is complete fiscal transparency in exchange for public support of these institutions. Give the public online access to the accounting records.

Ken D., at 4:35 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Yes, open the books

Ken D’s comment holds the key: whether in this controversial case in Cincinnati or anywhere else, just make the books public so everyone can examine how the institution works. In the absence of transparency, people will naturally be skeptical no matter what is reported.

There now exists a straightforward web-based mechanism to do just this. I have noted it on my site, and Inside Higher Ed has reported on it as well:

http://collegiateway.org/news/2007-opening-the-books

http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/03/07/financial

Open-book accounting of this kind should be mandated at all public institutions and urged upon all private institutions.

RJO, at 6:35 pm EST on November 11, 2008

Idles of the Marketplace ™

I’m not surprised this comes from the dean of a college that combines Education, Criminal Justice and Human Services. What do those three professions have in common? I mean, beyond surveillance, a focus on disciplining behavior, mountains of paperwork, fad-based research and programming, and an uncertain relationship to both policy and the individual?

richard, at 7:40 pm EST on November 11, 2008

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