Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The Big Game Redux

The Big Game Redux
            Robert A. Levine   4-25-12

Last week in an article entitled The Big Game, I decried the skewed funding by state and local governments that favored athletics over academics. I focused particularly on Texas, where there was inordinate spending on high school athletic facilities and coaches while funding for teachers and academics was being reduced. College coaches were also receiving outlandish sums compared to faculty members, while student tuition was being increased. I noted that this emphasis on athletics over academics did not bode well for the United States in terms of the nation’s ability to compete economically in the years ahead, since an educated populace is a vital resource.

An article yesterday by Jordan Weissmann in theatlantic.com (http://bit.ly/IrgVUe) describes a situation that has arisen at the University of Florida in Gainsville where its sports budget has been increased at the same time funding for its computer science department is being slashed. This is the result of the state cutting the university’s budget by 30% over the last six years, a total of $240 million. Much of the athletic department budget is covered by $36 million in annual contributions from alumni, and the athletic department does generate income for the school, providing $6.1 million to the university’s operating budget last year. However, if the state and the university’s alumni had some foresight, they would be funding an expansion of the computer science department before contributing money for sports. Florida and the nation will certainly derive more future benefits from the computer scientists that the university produces than from its football players.

Resurrecting Democracy
www.robertlevinebooks.com

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