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March 13, 2012Is University of Wisconsin Education Becoming More Elite? A Partial AnswerJohn Witte & Barbara Wolfe, via a kind Richard Askey email: There is considerable concern in Wisconsin and other states that accessibility to colleges and universities is becoming more elite; that due to rising costs of education and rising standards for admission universities are increasingly serving only those from higher income families. For example an article in the Christian Sciences Monitor in August of this year entitled "Too Few low income students?" stated that "about 50 percent of low-income students enroll in college right after high school, compared with 80 percent of high income students" and go on to state that the rate of high achieving low income students is about that of high income students that have far lower achievement scores1. William Bowen, Martin Kurzwell and Eugene Tobin note in their book that students in the bottom quartile of family income make up only 11 percent of elite college enrollment and receive no advantage from college admission programs; they call for an affirmative action program directed at low income applicants to promote equal opportunity and increase economic growth2. In this paper we use family income of University of Wisconsin- Madison applicants and those admitted over more than three decades to shed light on whether there has been a decline of opportunity to attend elite institutions among those with limited family incomes. As the premier public university in the state, this profile can serve more generally to provide insight on the issue of increasing elitism of premier public universities.Posted by Jim Zellmer at March 13, 2012 5:56 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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