In Pursuit of Prestige Contributor(s): Goldman, Charles (Author) |
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ISBN: 0765808293 ISBN-13: 9780765808295 Publisher: Routledge OUR PRICE: $52.20 Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats Published: August 2004 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Education | Higher - Business & Economics | Economics - General |
Dewey: 378.73 |
Physical Information: 0.43" H x 6.34" W x 9.02" (0.58 lbs) 190 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: By almost any measure, higher education is a vital part of the U.S. economy and society. Yet there is concern that the sector is inefficient or ill equipped to adapt to a changing environment. The information revolution, an aging population, demographic shifts, and a declining fiscal base all present it with major challenges.In Pursuit of Prestige describes the results of a two-year study of higher education in the United States designed to shed light on these issues. This volume examines higher education as an industry. It focuses on how institutions serve four identifiable markets that generate revenues (student enrollment, research funding, public fiscal support, and private giving). They analyze higher educational institutions' investment, pricing, and marketing behaviors, and the nature of competition among schools. They review the industry's basic conditions and market structure, then define the three key dimensions--degree level, scope, and resource allocation--by which institutions map out strategies for competing for markets.The heart of the book is an analysis showing how these strategies are carried out based on site-visit data from 26 highly diverse colleges and universities. This broad sampling covers all geographic regions of the country and every type of institution from elite research universities to community colleges. The authors then consider what strategies are possible in particular markets and how they affect students and competing institutions. Their conclusion draws out the implications of strategy and competition for the various customers of the U.S. higher education industry. Groundbreaking and genuinely exploratory in methodology. |
Contributor Bio(s): Gates, Susan M.: - Susan M. Gates is an economist at RAND specializing in the areas of industrial organization, political economy, and applications of economic management principles to public sector organizations.Goldman, Charles A.: - Charles A. Goldman is an economist at RAND, specializing in the economics of higher education. He has recently published Ph.D. Factory (with William F. Massey) and Paying for University Research Facilities and Administration (with T. Williams).Brewer, Dominic J.: - Dominic J. Brewer is director of RAND's Education Program. He is a labor economist specializing in the economics of education and has published widely on issues ranging from teacher labor markets to school resource allocation to community college organizations. He is a visiting associate professor of economics at UCLA. |