In 1983, the magazine, U.S. News & World Report, took upon itself the chore of ranking
the nation’s colleges and universities for excellence. That effort grew and evolved algorithms for
producing a ranking that has become an important factor in evaluating a school’s
performance. The producers of this
report bragged in 2008 about the
extent of their influence.
“When U.S. News started the college and university rankings 25 years ago,
no one imagined that these lists would become what some consider to be the
800-pound gorilla of American higher education, important enough to be the
subject of doctoral dissertations, academic papers and conferences, endless
debate, and constant media coverage.
What began with little fanfare has spawned imitation college rankings in
at least 21 countries, including Canada, China, Britain, Germany, Poland,
Russia, Spain, and Taiwan.”
One might conclude from this that the ranking enterprise
has been a roaring success. Perhaps it
has been, but only for the finances of those who produce it. Instead, it serves as an example of what
Cathy O’Neil refers to as a weapon of math destruction (WMD). She includes this ranking exercise as one of numerous
WMDs that afflict us in her book Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy.
U.S. News began
their ranking activities by running a beauty contest basing its ranking on
responses to a survey by university presidents.
Stanford won the first—a school one might expect to win a beauty contest. But this was deemed to be too simpleminded—and
could easily be copied by a competitor.
The U.S. News
team had to arrive at a more sophisticated approach. They knew which schools were expected to selected
as the best, so whatever approach they chose had to favor the high-profile
schools. The natural thing to do then
would be to assume all good schools would have the characteristics of the
presumed best. Since the actual
characteristics of a great school are difficult to quantify, they had to use
whatever was quantifiable.
“They couldn’t measure learning,
happiness, confidence, friendships, or other aspects of a student’s four-year
experience.”
“Instead they picked proxies
that seemed to correlate with success.
They looked at SAT scores, student-teacher ratios, and acceptance rates. They analyzed the percentage of incoming
freshmen who made it to sophomore year and the percentage of those who
graduated. They calculated the
percentage of living alumni who contributed money to their alma mater,
surmising that if they gave a college money there was a good chance they
appreciated the education there. Three
quarters of the ranking would be produced by an algorithm—an opinion formalized
in code—that incorporated these proxies.
In the other quarter, they would factor in the subjective views of
college officials throughout the country.”
A typical characteristic of a WMD is that there is no
mechanism for feedback. O’Neil uses the
example of sports teams who can study the results of numerous interactions and
formulate new strategies for obtaining statistically better results in those
situations. They can apply those
strategies and observe any change in results.
These changes can then be used modify their procedures and try
again. This iteration is the process by
which a good algorithm is produced. But
if you are ranking schools somewhat arbitrarily, there is no mechanism for
feedback; the results are either credible or not. If not credible, then the project likely
dies. But U.S. News already knew how to make their results credible.
“U.S. News’s first data-driven ranking came out in 1988, and the
results seemed sensible. However, as the
ranking grew into a national standard, a vicious feedback loop materialized. The trouble was that the rankings were
self-reinforcing. If a college fared
badly in U.S. News, its reputation
would suffer, and conditions would deteriorate.
Top students would avoid it, as would top professors. Alumni would howl and cut back on
contributions. The ranking would tumble
further. The ranking, in short, was
destiny.”
“Now the vast reputational ecosystem
of colleges and universities was over shadowed by a single column of numbers.”
Since this ranking system became a national standard,
whether it was worthy of that status or not, schools had no choice but to play
by the rules the U.S. News
journalists had established. They had
fifteen categories in which they could try to improve their grades—or cheat in
order to inflate their scores.
“Some administrators have gone
to desperate lengths to drive up their rank.
Baylor University paid the fee for admitted students to retake the SAT, hoping another try would
boost their scores—and Baylor’s ranking.
Elite small schools, including Bucknell University in Pennsylvania and
California’s Clarement McKenna, sent false data to U.S. News, inflating the SAT scores of their incoming
freshmen. And Iona College, in New York,
acknowledged in 2011 that its employees had fudged numbers about nearly
everything: test scores, acceptance and graduation rates, freshman retention,
student-faculty ratio, and alumni giving”
Most schools invested money instead of cheating. If they provided improved leisure activities,
fancy student centers, better dorms, and better sports teams, they thought these
would encourage more students to apply, so they could then turn more students
away and improve their acceptance ratio (make it smaller). If they invested in higher paid professors
perhaps they could attract better students with higher SAT scores and up that
grade. If you wished to improve your
ranking you had to spend more money—and spend it faster than the other schools
were increasing their spending.
Incredibly, the U.S.
News team never considered cost of education as a ranking criterion. They claim they do this ranking for the
benefit of the students so they can make better choices concerning schools, but
did they think cost was of no interest to students? Were there no students who were interested in
a good education at a modest cost? Of
what benefit is it to have a market for higher education in which cost plays no
role?
“By leaving cost out of the
formula, it was as if U.S. News had
handed college presidents a gilded checkbook.
They had a commandment to maximize performance in fifteen areas, and
keeping costs low wasn’t one of them. In
fact, if they raised prices, they’d have more resources for addressing the
areas where they were being measured.”
“Tuition has skyrocketed ever
since. Between 1985 and 2013, the cost
of higher education rose by more than 500 percent, nearly four times the rate
of inflation.”
The existence of the U.S.
News rankings has required both schools and students to game the ranking
system as best they can.
“All of this activity takes
place within a vast ecosystem surrounding the U.S. News rankings, whose model functions as the de facto law of
the land. If the editors rejigger the
weightings on the model, paying less attention to SAT scores, for example, or
more to graduation rates, the entire ecosystem of education must adapt. This extends from universities to
consultancies, high school guidance departments, and, yes, the students.”
Colleges can no longer think in terms of students as
independent entities, rather, they are members of an ensemble of students. It is the ensemble against which schools are
scored. This makes acceptance decisions much
more complicated. Fortunately there are
those who are prepared to provide the algorithms to help the school
administrators maximize their scores.
“As colleges position themselves
to move up the U.S. News charts, they
manage their student populations almost like an investment portfolio.”
Somewhat less directly, high school students are also
driven by the U.S. News algorithm.
“Each college’s admissions model
is derived, at least in part, from the U.S.
News model, and each one is a mini-WMD.
These models lead students and their parents to run in frantic circles
and spend obscene amounts of money. And
they’re opaque. This leaves most of the
participants (or victims) in the dark.
But it creates a big business for consultants….who manage to learn their
secrets, either by cultivating sources at the universities or by reverse
engineering their algorithms.”
The people who do not have a lot of money to spend are,
as always, the victims. They lose
because the cost of education is being artificially driven up, and because the
cost of getting admitted to a university is also being driven up.
“The victims, of course, are the
vast majority of Americans, the poor and middle-class families who don’t have
thousands of dollars to spend on courses and consultants. They miss out on precious insider
knowledge. The result is an education
system that favors the privileged. It
tilts against needy students, locking out the great majority of them—and
pushing them down a path toward poverty.
It deepens the social divide.”
No comments:
Post a Comment