Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog

News and views about philosophy, the academic profession, academic freedom, intellectual culture, and other topics. The world’s most popular philosophy blog, since 2003.

  1. Mark's avatar

    Everything you say is true, but what is the alternative? I don’t think people are advocating a return to in-class…

  2. Deirdre Anne's avatar
  3. Keith Douglas's avatar

    Cyber security professional here -reliably determining when a computational artifact (file, etc.) was created is *hard*. This is sorta why…

  4. sahpa's avatar

    Agreed with the other commentator. It is extremely unlikely that Pangram’s success is due to its cheating by reading metadata.

  5. Deirdre Anne's avatar
  6. Mark's avatar
  7. Mark Robert Taylor's avatar

    At the risk of self-advertising:… You claim “AI is unusual in degree, not in kind” and “It is not clear…

Financial health of California’s public universities and colleges?

IHE reports that the Governor is proposing increased funding (contingent on tuition freezes).  I'd be curious to hear from readers "on the ground" at UC and Cal State campuses how things are in terms of finances.

Leave a Reply to Aldo Antonelli Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

3 responses to “Financial health of California’s public universities and colleges?”

  1. I attended a UC about ten years ago and I continue to coach there. I also attend a graduate program at a Cal State, so my perspective is the anecdotal consensus I get from the students I coach, teach, and study with.

    Horror stories of students being forced to take a completely different major because they couldn't get classes were rare when I was an undergraduate, isolated "friends of friends." But that is definitely no longer the case. I regularly hear these types of stories now. Of course a less impacted major like philosophy will attract more of these cases, but the message is fairly clear on both campuses: decide your major early, take summer (and now short winter) term classes, and don't be surprised if you stay a fifth year. It seems worse at the Cal States, but that's just based on the comparison of two schools.

  2. Here is Chris Newfield's take on the governor's proposed budget for UC. The takeaway is that even with the 5% increase in funding, the state's portion of the UC budget is still 14% below where it was in 2007-08.

  3. The link did not come through in the previous comment. Newfield's analysis of the governor's budget for UC is here:
    http://utotherescue.blogspot.com/2014/01/austerity-premises-refuted-governors.html

Designed with WordPress