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In the Money with a Masters Program

{ Posted on Sep 05 2008 by Seeker }

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’s degrees used to be the red headed stepchildren of higher education.  Neither here nor there,  uncraved by employers and only tolerated by universities.  But like football in Michigan, fortunes change quickly.  The Times checks in on the new new Masters Degree:

  • enrollment in the University of Chicago’s “ of Arts degree in social sciences has quadrupled since 1989, jumping to 160 from 40, and despite a tuition price tag of $37,000″
  • to the head of the Cal State system ’s degrees are the “coin of the realm”
  • the for-profit University of Phoenix gave out 24,788 MAs last year – or one thousand more than the number of BAs it awarded.

Is it really so great to get that second degree?  It depends on who you are.  The Times proffers some uninspiring anecdotes about students who got better jobs with their MAs.  But no matter how these matriculants do, the tuition they pay sure is sweet for universities, who can add MA students to their extant classes, turning said classes into paying propositions without much institutional outlay.  As a Chicago administrator notes, “it is beneficial for the university because there is a lot of tuition income to be had.”

Ahh, tuition dollars, the milk and honey of academia.  Maybe Michigan can use its masters degree lucre to invest in a football team capable of scoring touchdowns against Division I opposition.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/12/education/12masters.html

The number of students in the University of Chicago program that bestows a of Arts degree in social sciences has quadrupled since 1989, jumping to 160 from 40, and despite a tuition price tag of $37,000, every year more students clamor for admittance.

“It’s an expensive degree, but students have calculated how fast they get their investment back,” said John J. MacAloon, an associate dean at the University of Chicago and director of the program. “And it is beneficial for the university because there is a lot of tuition income to be had.”

More students than ever have started ’s programs this fall, and universities are seeing those programs as potentially lucrative sources of revenue. The number of students earning these degrees around the country has nearly doubled since 1980. Since 1970, the growth is 150 percent, more than twice as fast as bachelor and doctorate programs.

’s programs are the most obvious targets of opportunity,” said George L. Mehaffy, a vice president of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. “The degrees are in high demand, and this is an optimal time to enter or expand the market.”

For students, the degrees are often expensive; at private universities, many students take out $50,000 in loans for every year of school. And scholarships and fellowships are rare, unlike doctoral programs, which are usually fully financed by universities.

Still, many say the price is worth it. In his two-year ’s program in science technology and environmental policy from the University of Minnesota Craig Nelson had $35,000 in loans. Now, he works in regulatory affairs at the 3M Company.

“Without the degree, I wouldn’t have the job,” he said. “So even though I’ll be paying the loan for 10 years, it was a good move for me.”

Getting into the business of offering these degrees can be a good move for universities, too, with some that have traditionally focused only on undergraduate students now entering the ’s market. The California State University system, for example, has introduced many new applied ’s degrees and is expanding its ’s of business administration programs.

“We are really conscious of the fact that ’s degrees are becoming the coin of the realm,” said Gary W. Reichard, the executive vice chancellor and chief academic officer for the California system. “And because M.B.A.’s can offer tremendous salary boosts down the road, we can charge higher tuitions to students.”

Universities also do not have to provide dormitory rooms and dining halls for ’s candidates, because students typically do not live on campus.

Some university officials say the explosion of these programs has less to do with revenue than it does with the marketplace pressures on students to get higher degrees and credentials.

Thomas Ehrlich, a senior scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and a former president of Indiana University, said that although many ’s programs could be good revenue streams for universities, “We’re not in the business of making money.” He added, “We’re in the business of educating students.”

But some schools are in the business of both. The University of Phoenix, a commercial institution with 60 branch campuses and around 200,000 students, awarded 24,788 ’s degrees last year, mostly for work completed online in business and education. That was at least a thousand more than the number of bachelor’s degrees it awarded.

Many university provosts say a education can be more expensive to provide than an undergraduate degree, merely because class sizes are usually smaller in courses. But for universities that already have established doctoral programs, adding paying ’s students to the mix means they get a bump in tuition dollars without a heavy outlay of resources.

“Sometimes there is unused capacity in classrooms,” Mr. Mehaffy said. “If there are 10 people in a course one year and 15 the next, there is a 50 percent growth but no real drain on the institution.”

Universities are also luring ’s students into staying for multiple years by offering dual-degree programs: two ’s degrees at twice the cost. Some programs join international affairs and journalism, science and public policy, business and education. Other schools extend programs; for example, the University of Wisconsin’s two-year ’s degree in anthropology can be lengthened to three years if students want to add a museum studies concentration.

And many students believe that these multiple degrees are highly valuable in today’s competitive job market.

Rey A. Phillips Santos has three degrees gracing his résumé: two ’s and one in law. After completing the ’s of arts program in the social sciences from the University of Chicago, he decided to go on to the Chicago-Kent College of Law, in a joint-degree program in environmental management with the Stuart School of Business.

“There is a huge demand for credentials in high-level jobs now,” said Mr. Phillips, who is a lawyer for the Chicago city government. “Each of my degrees helped me to get a leg up in the job market, and earn higher salaries than I would have otherwise. They were great investments.”

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