George P. Burdell
Georgia Tech Fan
- Messages
- 20
- Location
- Smyrna
No, it doesn’t. Keep in mind that a boatload of $$ nowadays has to go to “support” (students services like health care, mental health/counseling, academic support, foreign studies programs, career placement, academic advising) rather than to direct instruction. Parents complain about how much a college education costs nowadays, but they never stop to think how much more is demanded of colleges nowadays. No matter how much money GT pulls in on the academic side, it simply isn’t enough to do everything that we are asked to do.
I work in a School that teaches part of the core curriculum for the engineering/science/CS majors. We have a huge student throughput every year, and have to reply heavily on grad TAs in order to support lab/recitation requirements. We are turning away grad students that we need to teach those labs, because we cannot afford to pay the GTA stipend from the resources the Institute provides. We’ve done the math: the $$ we get from the Institute is well below the $$ in tuition that our classes generate. The problem is that GT has to earmark a large fraction of tuition to Institute-level responsibilities.
The simple truth is that 21st-century higher education is governed by a boatload of expensive, non-academic bells and whistles designed to earn a higher USN&WR rating and enticestudentsparents to pick “us” over “them”.
[Sorry. Big soapbox issue for me. I do agree that AT needs more support, too.]
Then why is GT's endowment almost twice as big as UGA and triple of Clemson? Last time I looked GT is top 10 in research expenditures. Alot of people don't realize how much research $$$ dwarfs college football/basketball $$$.