Title: Facts about the American Education System
1- Facts about the American Education System
2Quick Facts
- College Enrollment
- Total 17.5 million
- 7.5 million males
- 9.9 million females
3Students Earning College Degrees
2005
Male Female
All Degrees 2850
Associates (1,000) 268 429
Bachelor's (1,000) 613 826
Masters's (1,000) 234 341
First professional (1,000) 44 43
Doctoral (1,000) 27 26
4Total expenses 4 year institutions
- 2000
- Public 8,653 Private 21,856
- 2010
- Public 15,014 Private 32,790
- http//nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id76
5Tuition Increases
- From 2000 to 2010
- Public institution prices increased 73
- Private institution prices increased 50
6Educational Attainment
- 1960
- 41 high school graduates or higher
- 7.7 college graduates or higher
- 2009
- 86.7 high school graduates or higher
- 29.5 college graduates or higher
- http//huebler.blogspot.com/2011/01/usa.html
7US versus SC
- US
- 86.7 high school graduates or higher
- 29.5 college graduates or higher
- SC
- 81.7 high school graduates or higher
- 25.0 college graduates or higher
8Education
9Public 4 year Tuition to PCI
10Tuition Hikes
11Higher Ed vs K-12 Expenditure Growth
12 Student Fees and Athletics
CONFERENCE Percentage of Athletics Program Covered by Student Fees Profit/Loss Averages by Conference Total NCAA Distribution (2010-2011) Percentage of Total NCAA Div I Funding
ATLANTIC COAST 8.46 1,456,260 38,724,762 8.10
BIG 12 1.42 6,419,675 35,949,380 7.52
BIG EAST 11.80 887,210 44,074,162 9.22
BIG TEN 0.45 7,021,941 42,691,368 8.93
PACIFIC-10 2.17 6,372,645 33,586,746 7.03
SOUTHEASTERN 2.58 7,293,353 33,671,053 7.04
AMERICA EAST 31.31 112,543 9,168,424 1.92
ATLANTIC 10 28.89 1,330,936 15,379,568 3.22
ATLANTIC SUN 55.73 335,286 4,553,605 0.95
BIG SKY 16.61 72,229 7,023,406 1.47
BIG SOUTH 51.70 145,835 6,692,743 1.40
BIG WEST 32.44 257,917 7,915,097 1.66
COLONIAL ATHLETIC 61.92 563,286 13,243,676 2.77
CONFERENCE USA 21.42 51,518 20,445,493 4.28
HORIZON LEAGUE 31.12 (272,749) 9,320,618 1.95
MID-AMERICAN 38.47 1,345,901 15,839,969 3.31
MID EASTERN ATHLETIC 46.28 199,651 7,279,652 1.52
MISSOURI VALLEY 27.74 386,443 10,993,414 2.30
MOUNTAIN WEST 10.96 (295,572) 16,702,798 3.49
NORTHEAST 0.00 510,906 8,681,492 1.82
OHIO VALLEY 19.56 108,133 7,786,660 1.63
SOUTHERN 47.23 40,083 9,031,883 1.89
SOUTHLAND 36.20 68,664 7,521,882 1.57
SOUTHWESTERN 20.13 241,527 7,153,527 1.50
SUN BELT 33.15 (754,013) 12,925,836 2.70
THE SUMMIT LEAGUE 18.02 (28,044) 6,782,046 1.42
WEST COAST 24.14 (797,440) 7,712,528 1.61
WESTERN ATHLETIC 10.09 (147,643) 11,798,464 2.47
TOTAL 477,955,000
Note IVY Group, Metro Atlantic Athletic, Patriot League, and Independents were excluded due to the fact that all members were private institutions Note IVY Group, Metro Atlantic Athletic, Patriot League, and Independents were excluded due to the fact that all members were private institutions Note IVY Group, Metro Atlantic Athletic, Patriot League, and Independents were excluded due to the fact that all members were private institutions Note IVY Group, Metro Atlantic Athletic, Patriot League, and Independents were excluded due to the fact that all members were private institutions Note IVY Group, Metro Atlantic Athletic, Patriot League, and Independents were excluded due to the fact that all members were private institutions
13Why get a degree?
14Table 4
15The NACE Summer 2007 Salary Survey reports the
following average starting salaries for various
college degrees
- MajorStarting SalaryIncrease
- Chemical engineering59,361
- Computer science56,201
- Electrical engineering55,292
- Information sciences50,852
- Accounting46,718
- Marketing40,161
- Political science34,590
- History33,768
- English32,553
- Sociology32,033
- Psychology31,631
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18Education and WagesThe Education Wage Premium
19Is the expense of college worth it? The lifetime
financial payoff of a college degree was
estimated at .9 million in 2000, or 1.24
million in 2012 dollars (Day and Newburger,
2002). Levin et. al (2007) estimate a
lifetime increase in earnings of between 950,000
and 1,387,000 for men high school dropouts and
college graduates. Levin, H. M., Belfield,
C., Muennig, P., Rouse, C. (2007). The costs
and benefits of an excellent education for all of
Americas children. New YorkTeachers College
Press. Day, J.C., Newburger, E.C. (2002). The
Big Payoff Educational Attainment and Synthetic
Estimates of Work-Life Earnings. (Current
Population Reports, Special Studies, P23-210).
Washington, DC Commerce Dept., Economics and
Statistics Administration, Census Bureau.
On-Line. Available http//www.census.gov/prod/2
002pubs/p23-210.pdf
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21Unemployment Rate by Race
22Education and Race
23- ITS YOUR MAJOR, NOT YOUR
- ALMA MATER
24Why get a degree?
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26Why get a degree?
- Social Status
- Job Enjoyment
- Career Options
- Meet people
- Surprisingly, 83 percent of the women surveyed
said getting married was one of their most
important goals, and 63 percent said they
believed they would meet their future spouse in
college. - However, the report said this is a sobering
statistic considering there are an average of
only 79 men per 100 women on college campuses. - Avoid Working
- Gain Maturity
27Is it always worth it to go to college?
28Why are more women attending school than
men?Why are African American females the
largest growing group in American institutions?
29Employers And Other Entities Covered By EEO
Laws Discriminatory Practices Under Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA), and the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), it is
illegal to discriminate in any aspect of
employment, including hiring and firing
compensation, assignment, or classification of
employees transfer, promotion, layoff, or
recall job advertisements recruitment testing
use of company facilities training and
apprenticeship programs fringe benefits pay,
retirement plans, and disability leave or other
terms and conditions of employment.
30Discriminatory practices under these laws also
include harassment on the basis of race, color,
religion, sex, national origin, disability, or
age retaliation against an individual for
filing a charge of discrimination, participating
in an investigation, or opposing discriminatory
practices employment decisions based on
stereotypes or assumptions about the abilities,
traits, or performance of individuals of a
certain sex, race, age, religion, or ethnic
group, or individuals with disabilities and
denying employment opportunities to a person
because of marriage to, or association with, an
individual of a particular race, religion,
national origin, or an individual with a
disability. Title VII also prohibits
discrimination because of participation in
schools or places of worship associated with a
particular racial, ethnic, or religious group.
Employers are required to post notices to all
employees advising them of their rights under the
laws EEOC enforces and their right to be free
from retaliation. Such notices must be
accessible, as needed, to persons with visual or
other disabilities that affect reading.