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Worcester State College Campus News
Item Op-Ed Article Released
11/12/04
Massachusetts Needs to Invest in State
College Faculty
By Janelle C. Ashley and Barbara J. Sinnott
In the early 1800s,
Horace Mann started a bold experiment by founding “normal schools” that
marked the beginning of the state college system in Massachusetts and of
public higher education nationwide. The Worcester Normal School, now
Worcester State College, was established in 1874 to provide the city of
Worcester--bursting with new immigrants--with teachers to teach their
children the “ways of democracy.” Mann’s idea of expanding access to higher
education to all citizens has been an unequivocal success. The system that
he founded now numbers nine state colleges, educates 45,000 students each
year and boasts over 200,000 alumni living in Massachusetts. It is ironic
that the state that created the first public colleges now ranks next to dead
last in the country in per capita support for public higher education.
Nowhere is this lack of support more evident
than in the salaries paid to our faculty. The boards of trustees and
presidents of the state colleges recently completed a study that shows that
faculty at Massachusetts state colleges are significantly underpaid compared
to their counterparts at similar institutions in other leading industrial
states.
When factoring in the
high cost of living in Massachusetts, the study found that state college
faculty at all ranks were underpaid by 19%, with full professors – our most
experienced educators – the worst off, earning 22%, or $18,913, less than
their peers. Even using a more conservative estimate that does not account
for wide disparities in cost of living, faculty across all ranks at the
Massachusetts state colleges receive 11% less than the average salary of
their peers, with full professors earning 14% less.
Low faculty salaries
greatly hinder our ability to attract, recruit and retain new faculty
members. We conduct national searches to identify and recruit the highest
quality faculty to our campuses. When considering hiring offers, however,
candidates are increasingly choosing to locate in states with lower costs of
living even if salary levels are comparable. Most of the cost differential
is attributable to the high housing costs in our state, which in 2000 were
60% above the U.S. average.
The failure to
adequately compensate our faculty also sends a powerful message to our
students that their education is not that important to the people of
Massachusetts. With 95% of Worcester State College students coming from
working families who live in the state, our students deserve and properly
demand the highest quality education. But the reality is that our inability
to provide competitive pay will eventually erode educational quality on our
campuses. We have an obligation as educators and state leaders to prevent
any compromise of the high educational standards we have set for our public
colleges.
Perhaps most important of all, relatively low
faculty salaries are dangerously inconsistent with the environment of
excellence that our professors have been so essential in creating at all of
the state colleges. High quality teaching and learning are at the core of
this environment, and our faculty constitute its lifeblood.
Continued deterioration
of faculty salaries is not simply a campus or even an educational issue; it
calls into question our future competitiveness as a state. Attracting and
retaining the best professors is at the core of our colleges' ability to
succeed in educating the future working professionals of the Commonwealth.
More than any other state, Massachusetts, with its knowledge-based economy,
depends on the presence of a highly educated workforce to attract
businesses, lure investment and create jobs.
The Division of
Employment and Training, in its employment projections for the State through
2010, has determined that 321,500 job openings will require a bachelor’s
degree or higher, as compared to 68,720 jobs that will require an
associate’s degree – almost a 5 to 1 ratio. The Massachusetts State
Colleges are the most affordable and accessible regional gateway for our
citizens to pursue four year degree and professional development
opportunities in Massachusetts. And, as importantly, our students are
keeping their new skills here in the Bay State, with more than 80% of our
graduates remaining in Massachusetts. For Worcester State College, the
impact is even greater as 94% of our students remain in the state with 80%
choosing to live in the Greater Worcester area.
As the Massachusetts
Technology Collaborative has warned, “A strong public sector higher
education system is needed to complement private higher education. Low and
declining support per capita threatens the Massachusetts Innovation Economy
and its well educated workforce.” One hundred and sixty five years ago
Horace Mann recognized what is equally true today: By investing in our state
colleges and in public higher education more generally, we are investing in
our own future as a state.
Janelle Ashley is
president of Worcester State College. Barbara Sinnott is chair of the
Worcester State College Board of Trustees.
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