Abstract

The Crisis in Higher Education

Mitchell, Donald W. | December 11, 1948 issue

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An instructor in an ordinary American college enjoys an income approximating that of a dish washer or day laborer. Few persons realize the gravity of the financial crisis now threatening higher education. The normal schools, junior colleges, small liberal-arts colleges, second-class universities, and teachers' colleges that dot the country enroll together many more students than the great universities. Though college teaching has never been even moderately well paid in comparison with other specialized occupations, its rewards have become still smaller since World War II.

See Also:

EDUCATION, Higher; EDUCATION -- United States; TEACHERS -- Salaries, etc.; FINANCIAL crises; UNIVERSITIES & colleges; ECONOMIC history; UNITED States
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