9780691171807-0691171807-Can College Level the Playing Field?: Higher Education in an Unequal Society

Can College Level the Playing Field?: Higher Education in an Unequal Society

ISBN-13: 9780691171807
ISBN-10: 0691171807
Author: Michael McPherson, Sandy Baum
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Format: Hardcover 264 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780691171807
ISBN-10: 0691171807
Author: Michael McPherson, Sandy Baum
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Format: Hardcover 264 pages

Summary

Can College Level the Playing Field?: Higher Education in an Unequal Society (ISBN-13: 9780691171807 and ISBN-10: 0691171807), written by authors Michael McPherson, Sandy Baum, was published by Princeton University Press in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other Social Sciences (Class, Sociology, Higher & Continuing Education) books. You can easily purchase or rent Can College Level the Playing Field?: Higher Education in an Unequal Society (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Social Sciences books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.59.

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Review
“Baum and McPherson provide a novel and convincing analysis of the role higher education plays in our unequal society and propose realistic policies and practices that can help us to achieve lasting change. This invaluable book is essential reading for college and university leaders, for policymakers who want to understand the enterprise they oversee, and for anyone concerned with making our society less unjust.”―Harry Brighouse, coauthor of Educational Goods
“In this gem of a book, Baum and McPherson explore the disturbing underbelly of America’s system for handing out economic opportunity. Combining their deep expertise about higher education, these economists present an assessment that is sober without being dismal, dismissing quick fixes but offering hope based on sensible long-term policies.”―Charles T. Clotfelter, Duke University
“This highly readable, eye-opening book affirms the essential contributions of higher education in the United States while also showing why it alone cannot ensure upward mobility and economic growth. It is also a call to action, identifying policies to broaden the impact of institutions and situate them within a more equitable and productive economy.”―David Baime, senior vice president for government relations, American Association of Community Colleges
“This book’s unique contribution is to examine higher education not in isolation but in the context of inequality in American society, from children’s earliest experiences in life to what they encounter as adults in the labor market. Baum and McPherson draw on this more complete picture of higher education’s role to detail a set of institutional actions and policy changes that would foster a more equal society.”―Matthew M. Chingos, coauthor of Game of Loans: The Rhetoric and Reality of Student Debt
“Written by two of the nation’s most respected experts on education, this book rejects the increasingly popular idea that reforms in higher education can level the playing field, explaining why we must pay more attention to opportunity-enhancing measures in the precollege years and the labor market. Baum and McPherson provide a well-informed, realistic, and comprehensive account of how to create more opportunity in America.”―Isabel Sawhill, author of The Forgotten Americans: An Economic Agenda for a Divided Nation
“This important contribution provides not just a highly readable description of the current state of American higher education, it challenges us to do better. As the authors show, the stakes are high. May this compelling call to action lead to lasting and meaningful change.”―Morton Schapiro, president of Northwestern University
Why higher education is not a silver bullet for eradicating economic inequality and social injustice
We often think that a college degree will open doors to opportunity regardless of one’s background or upbringing. In this eye-opening book, two of today’s leading economists argue that higher education alone cannot overcome the lasting effects of inequality that continue to plague us, and offer sensible solutions for building a more just and equitable society.
Sandy Baum and Michael McPherson document the starkly different educational and social environments in which children of different races and economic backgrounds grow up, and explain why social equity requires sustained efforts to provide the broadest possible access to high-quality early childhood and K–12 education. They dismiss panaceas like eliminating college tuition and replacing the classroom experience with online education, revealing why they fail to provide better education for those who need it most, and discuss how wages in our dysfunctional labor market are sharply skewed toward the highly educated. Baum and McPherson argue that greater investment in the postsecondary institutions that educate most low-income and marginalized students will have a bigger impact than just getting more students from these backgrounds

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