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"Education a leveler?"

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Anonymous Anonymous said...

High school graduates who have gained the intellectual abilities required for succeeding at the university level -- admittedly, often a minority of all graduates -- have a range of choices that can genuinely erase most of the disadvantages of birth. A first-generation freshman from a low-income family can nonetheless gain a great engineering education or a great education in art history at an affordable public university;


This is not true. There are universities that have such a low reputation that graduates do not benefit much from earning diplomas there.

March 4, 2011 at 7:07 PM

Anonymous dunkelblau said...

One of the confounding factors in this analysis is that we cannot assume that all SES have the same attitude toward the value of education. It's plausible that the inequities in primary education arise purely from the way the system is funded (via local property taxes), but perhaps the problems you describe are consequences of something besides lack of financial resources.

My guess is that the best students attend a top tier public university for a different reason than they might choose an elite school. The public university student is there purely for the excellent education while the elite school student is building a network of connections. At the risk of oversimplifying, I would argue that the public university largely succeeds in its mission to "level the playing field", while the elite school does not have such a mission and is actually designed, through admissions policy and price of tuition, to preserve inherited positions of privilege.

I think we should not use income as the gauge for the value of an education because we know how income can be substantially affected by other factors, especially at the high tail. For example some very successful family businesses will not put an outsider in charge even if the candidate has earned a Harvard diploma.

March 5, 2011 at 12:50 PM

Anonymous Andrea Grazzini Walstrom said...

My observation is education is both leveler and divider.

I see a paradox between academic institutions (public and private) which appear to have well-funded pro-social programs that fail in practice.

By contrast i observe less recognized places where culture is primary over credentials seem to have richer relational networks and most sustained evidence of emotional intelligence skills.

In both cases intrinsic abilities can be either enriched or suppressed by environment.

As évidence I offer an essay that relates: http://tinyurl.com/BBBlamechange

(with apologies to those who would perceive a social media EI faux pas at play).

Andrea

March 23, 2011 at 1:17 AM

Anonymous buy dissertation topics said...

What about the outcomes of students from different socioeconomic groups who have successfully graduated from the elite institutions that Bowen et al survey?

November 13, 2012 at 7:08 AM

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