Thursday, January 01, 2009

Too Much Information?

Higher education policy disputes in Washington, DC are generally about information. As a rule, the federal government doesn't (and shouldn't) regulate how universities conduct their academic affairs. So most new federal initiatives consist of lawmakers asking questions: How many of your students graduate? How much money do you spend? On what? And so on. For the DC higher education lobby, the standard response to proposed new information reporting requirements is to (A) Loudly declare that they're a bad idea, and then (B) Go back to the office and try to come up with a justification for (A).

Such justifications come in three flavors. First, that American colleges and universities operate under a sacred principal of autonomy that dates back to (and possibly precedes) the founding of the Republic. This one hasn't been working very well lately, mostly because it's not true, but also because it begs the question of what, exactly, universities have to hide. The second argument is that new reporting requirements represent a terribly onerous administrative burden--because higher education institutions are apparently the only organizations in all the world that have been unable to use information technology to realize vast increases in the efficiency of gathering, storing, and processing information. Third, colleges argue that sending more information to the feds would constitute a grave threat to student privacy, a kind of creeping Big Brotherism that must be opposed at all costs. This one has been gaining traction lately, particularly given the current administration's attitudes towards civil liberties.

It's also nonsense. Colleges are more than happy to cough up individual student data to non-profits set up by the student loan industry. Then I pick up the New York Times and read that colleges are perfectly willing to disclose information about individual students to large private corporations, in exchange for money, so those corporations can sell students high-interest credit cards and give them a head start on pursuing the American dream of over-consumption and ruinous debt. Because while the U.S. Department of Education (a public agency accountable to elected officials which operates under strict federal privacy rules) can't be trusted, Bank of America can. It all depends, as it usually does, on whose interests are being served.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Kevin,

For those of us who don't work at One Dupont Circle, can you separate the interest-group argument from the merits: on its face, is it a good thing for colleges to cough up loads of personally-identifiable information to outsiders, including corporations?

While your argument isn't quite ad-hominem, it's also not definitive. I don't give a hoot how hypocritical any of the One Dupont Circle organization reps are; if something's a bad idea, it's a bad idea.

Jason Paul Becker said...

So what is the appropriate response that allows universities to protect themselves from falling under further regulation by the state? This information gathering only makes sense as part of a larger strategy to attempt to fund specific areas of higher ed with a specific set of requirements for that funding-- a model which will inherently drastically reshape American high education institutions in response to government policy.

Considering the track record of the kind of reform that inevitably occurs around funding from federal policy initiatives, perhaps higher education is wise to attempt to insulate itself from this kind of criticism. The manner in which these lobbies seem to be avoiding the issue appears to be juvenile and shallow, but that does not mean that universities should be answering the call for greater oversight.

What is the right response? What is the response that stresses the need to protect higher education in this way? The call for assessment of higher education is nothing new and has only increased since the Spelling's report, however, that does not mean this call is well-informed (or well-intentioned).