Welcome to What Happens Next.
My name is Larry Bernstein.
What happens next is a podcast which covers economics,
finance, politics, and sociology.
This week's topic is,
parents are paying for the party.
Our guest today is Laura Hamilton,
who is a sociologist at the University of California, Merced.
And the author of multiple books, including,
Broke, Who's Paying for the Party,
and Parenting by Degree.
Laura is interested in how socioeconomic status
influences who goes to college,
how students perform there,
their job prospects, and their marriage market.
This discussion should be very provocative.
There is much to cover, so buckle up.
I make this podcast to learn,
and I offer it free of charge.
If you enjoy today's podcast,
please subscribe from our website for weekly emails,
so that you can continue to enjoy this content.
Let's now begin with Laura's six minute opening remarks.
Thanks for having me, Larry.
The past half century has brought dramatic reductions
in public commitments to higher education in the US.
But defunding has not hit all colleges
and universities evenly.
The result is what some have referred to
as a separate and unequal system of higher education,
and what students from low-income households
who are disproportionately racially marginalized
attend resource poor post-secondary schools.
In broke, my co-author, Kelly Nielsen and I,
document the consequences of public funding cuts
on schools serving large percentages of marginalized students.
The book uses the University of California system
as a test case, but the patterns are widely applicable.
When states divest in higher education,
universities increase tuition and fees.
Schools also turn to private sources of revenue
to help compensate for lost state support,
endowments, non-resident tuition, donors,
auxiliary services, and corporate partners
have become much more central to public university budgets
as states pull back.
Our focal schools in broke,
the University of California Merced
and the University of California Riverside,
do the lion's share of work
with marginalized student populations for the system.
Both schools are majority Latinx and majority low income.
And both schools have very little access
to sources of private revenue
that universities use to compensate for state disinvestment.
Indeed, Merced's foundation receives less than 1%
of the private support that Berkeley's foundation takes
in during a given year.
University wealth is nationally concentrated at schools
that serve very few numbers of marginalized students.
The gaps by student race are in fact larger
than the gaps by student class.
If you look at endowment dollars per student by student race
at four year publics across the nation,
you'll see a clear pattern over time.
In the mid 1980s, endowment dollars per student
were very similar regardless of student race.
Over time, as post-secondary schools came to rely more
and more on private funding sources,
disparities sharpen such that Asian and white students
are located at resource-rich schools
where the average endowment dollars per student
are between $15,000 and $25,000,
whereas Latinx, black, and indigenous students
are enrolled in schools where there are fewer endowment dollars
closer to around 10,000 per student.
The chronic underfunding of racially disadvantaged students
relative to racially advantaged students
has been described by some scholars
as troublingly reminiscent of redlining.
Redlining is a series of discriminatory practices
that systematically deny public services or support
to residents of certain areas based on their race and ethnicity.
The term is most commonly used to refer to the fact
that areas where black residents lived
were deemed risky investments,
making it harder for black families and individuals
to obtain mortgages and other types of loans.
The redlining metaphor is fitting
for today's post-secondary system.
As colleges and universities that serve marginalized students
routinely and systematically have more limited access
to funding and resources.
Schools serving disadvantaged students
are often treated like redline neighborhoods
and that they have less access to various forms
of financial support.
These schools take hits in both status and ranking calculations
that often determine access to private resources.
They may also receive less resources from the state.
Universities that work with marginalized populations
are being literally starved for resources.
We document on-the-ground consequences
of institutional wealth gaps
for vibrant, sharp, and driven Latinx and black youth
from low-income families.
We describe classrooms with broken furniture,
missing ceiling tiles, dust-encrusted air vents,
wires coming out of walls,
floors covered with dirty footprints and leaps
and filthy dust and chairs.
We saw academic advisors with caseloads
of 750 students per advisor,
double that of the national average.
We found that counseling services,
even for urgent cases, had a three-month wait.
These disparities are deeply troubling.
College, particularly public college,
is often thought of as the great equalizer,
particularly for students from underrepresented backgrounds.
However, unequal post-secondary funding
leads to qualitatively different educational experiences
for racially marginalized students relative
to their more privileged peers.
You are a professor of sociology at UC Merced,
and it's a brand new school that opened in 2005.
Many of our listeners do not know about this university.
Tell us about this new University of California institution.
UC Merced is in the Central Valley of California.
It is an area that is very underserved by the state.
Most of the wealth in California is concentrated on the coasts,
and a lot of the infrastructure, development,
education, healthcare, business is on the coast as well.
This particular University of California campus
has been a long time in the making,
so it was discussed as part of the master plan
of California higher education in 1960
to have a University of California campus here,
but due to a lot of the inequities I just mentioned,
it took a really long time for the campus
to actually come online.
It serves a largely disadvantaged student body,
so around 60% Latinx, largely first generation,
low income students, large number of Pell Grant recipients.
The school has played an important role
in outreach to this region of the state,
but it also serves disadvantaged students
from the southern and northern parts of the state as well.
I looked up some demographic facts,
and the student body is 99% from in-state.
The University has around 8,000 students,
nearly 5,000 are Latino, 1,500 are Asian,
350 are African American, and 650 are white,
and nearly everyone that applies gets accepted.
It is basically open admission.
Normally, when we talk about privilege,
historically we describe it as white versus black,
but there are very few white students
who attend the school.
This is predominantly a Latino and Asian school.
What is it like teaching in a university
dominated by Latinos and Asians?
I want to emphasize that these are southeast Asian students
who are largely from disadvantaged Asian groups.
Often when we talk about Asian students,
there is a perception that we're talking
about those who have a great deal of privilege,
but in terms of Asian access to resources,
the group is pretty bifurcated
with East Asian students having more family wealth,
and those who are Southeast Asian
having a lot less family wealth
and looking very similar to my low-income Latinx students
here at UC Merced.
It's great, I love teaching here.
I'm white, and I had a huge learning curve
to teaching at UC Merced.
The students would challenge me in the classroom,
the sociology of education, literature,
and a lot of my prior research was white students,
and the students here were just having none of it.
They were really interested in thinking about intersections
between class and race, and not just black, white disparities,
and they were really clear to point out
the ways in which their racial backgrounds and experiences
meant that they brought unique things to the table.
The students that UC Merced in sociology
understood fundamental inequities
and the ways in which systems of power intersected
in ways that were really challenging for students
at Indiana University where I was previously teaching.
We started at a much higher level in sociology
because of that understanding and awareness.
I can't actually imagine teaching
a different student body at this point.
In your book, Broke, you mentioned that UC Merced
is not a major research institution like UC Berkeley.
Why is research relevant?
Because the student body is seeking a decent education
that supports underprivileged kids.
We talk about new universities as these schools
that are striving for research profile
that rely strongly on students that have been
underrepresented in higher education.
The school produces an enormous amount of research
for its size.
My department alone has something like $10 million in grants.
That's actually been one of the struggles
is to convey the importance of having a research institution
to which students from underrepresented communities
typically don't have great access to.
One of the challenges is to balance research
with the student population in an era
where you have reduced state funding
because Merced has been trying to grow
in about the worst possible historical moment
for higher education growth.
Almost immediately after the school was founded,
we hit a massive recession and higher education spending
over that period nationally is really taken and dived.
So it's always been a bit of a fight
to be able to do the research and the teaching
at a high level with limited resources.
I sent my kids to private schools in New York City
and I gave money to the school to provide scholarships
for underprivileged kids to attend that school.
I'm not sure that gift had the best bang for the buck.
Does it make more sense to give money to a school
that has predominantly underprivileged children
where the same funds could have helped many kids
and not just a handful that will get access
to one of the best private schools?
The same goes for university philanthropy.
I gave money to my alma mater.
Does it make more sense to give money
to a local community college or UC Merced
that helps poor students?
It seems to me that sending it to institutions
that are serving large numbers of students
from underrepresented groups is the way to go.
And the schools that are serving large numbers
are really not receiving much, if any,
large dollar donations to support the student population
that they have.
Students who are attending privileged institutions
are likely to graduate.
They're likely to do well.
The students who are attending less resource institutions
are every bit as talented as most of the students
that attend prestigious elite schools,
but they haven't had opportunities to perform
in supported ways.
I've watched these students over time
and I see when there is adequate support what they can do.
Previously on what happens next, we had Zvi Galeo speak.
He is the former head of Georgia Tech's computing department.
Zvi set up a online school for Georgia Tech
that specializes in computer science
that has a hundred thousand students.
It's relatively inexpensive at $8,000 per year per student.
And the school allows students to both live at home
and work to make some needed cash.
What do you think about technology radically reducing
the price of education that makes it easier
for underprivileged kids to enjoy most of the benefits
of a university education while living at home
and earning money on the side?
I've done a great deal of work on online education
in more recent years with my postdocs,
Christian Smith and Amber Villalobos
and my co-author Charlie Eaton.
We have the Higher Education Race and the Economy Lab
at UC Merced that has been focused on just this issue.
I don't know anything about the particular program
that you're mentioning,
but unfortunately research using national data
both on institutions and their enrollments
and also individual data on students
suggests that online programs produce worse graduation
outcomes and worse student debt,
human outcomes for students if they're attending
online versus in person.
There is probably a lot of variation
in terms of how students are going to do online
depending on how the program is set up.
But most public education programs are outsourced.
Online education is outsourced to online program managers
which are for-profit companies often backed
by private equity or venture capital
that run these programs for universities.
And there's significant evidence to suggest
that these programs are not high quality
and end up exploiting marginalized students.
I am not particularly optimistic
about technology as the silver bullet.
Not all online programs are the same.
Georgia Tech is ranked number five in the country
for undergraduate computer science
and hopefully this outstanding public university
can scale up to help its online students.
I wanna change topics to two of your previous books,
paying for the party and printing by degree.
You did an ethnographic analysis of female students
at the University of Indiana main campus at Bloomington
who lived under dormitory floor where you were the RA.
You initially did an ethnographic study of the students
who lived on your RA floor.
And then afterwards you did ethnographic work
on the parents of the same students.
Tell us about your findings.
That research started with a dormitory floor of women.
There was a year of ethnography on the dormitory floor
and then there were interviews with students every year
for five years.
And then I did a sixth wave of interviews when they were 30.
We were really interested in seeing how
their social class trajectories were formed
over a long period of time.
There were a number of instances in which families
were highly involved with what their students were doing
on every level, social, educational, emotional, economic,
this as a form of opportunity hoarding.
It's understandable.
I have a high level involvement in my kids' lives
and I grapple with this too, to what extent am I
extracting resources from institutions to support
my already privileged affluent white children?
But higher education institutions really want
involved parents because they can outsource some
of the responsibilities of making sure that students
complete school, making sure that they move into
career pathways that are really lucrative.
The parent university dynamic that encourages parents
to be really involved such that the university's benefit
and the parents engage in forms of opportunity hoarding
makes sense, but on the aggregate has some pretty
negative consequences for students from families
whose parents haven't attended college,
don't have that knowledge, maybe don't feel welcome
on college campuses.
I sat through an orientation once where the leadership
was talking to parents and they were saying,
you probably remember this when you were in college
and I could just see parents faces fall because a lot
of them hadn't attended college and that made them feel
like they didn't belong.
Parents want to help their kids in almost all cases,
but if it's not an experience you've had,
you may feel out of your depth.
One of the things my research suggests is that
universities really need to think about how to scaffold
and provide resources without expecting that level
of a parental involvement that's not really possible
for all families.
In one of my favorite scenes from your book,
paying for the party, it's the first day of college
at Indiana and you walk into a room of a Jewish girl
from Highland Park, Illinois, which is the suburb
directly next to where I was raised.
Her mother was unpacking her suitcase and you asked
where his dad and he was off at Home Depot buying
supplemental lighting for the room.
And the young woman student was sitting there on a bed
watching her parents take care of the situation.
And then her roommate arrived and she was a first-generation
college student from a rural farm town in Indiana.
And she entered the room, threw her duffel bag on the bed
and just walked out.
And you asked yourself at the time, I wonder which student
will do better here at college, the pamper child
with intense parental involvement or the student
who has skinned her knee and figures out stuff on her own.
What did you find out?
What you're describing is the intergenerational
transmission of wealth.
A lot of people think about higher education
as the great equalizer.
The problem is that that doesn't work quite that way.
Parents are leveraging all kinds of capital,
whether it's social connections to ensure their child gets
access to a job, whether it's money to allow for geographic
mobility.
A lot of lower income students couldn't get to the labor
markets where they would have the greatest bang for their buck
on the skills that they had learned in higher education.
It's also about marital networks, access to someone
who's equally privileged.
And you're going to consolidate your family wealth
with his family wealth and then create a new generation
of children.
When I interviewed women at 30, the grandparents
were already paying for the private schools of their kids'
children.
So it's many generations of wealth.
Those processes often are not visible.
People tend to make assumptions that the success of individuals
is a function of their effort and abilities.
And it ignores these forms of privilege that get laundered.
In paying for the party, you introduce the term
pink helicopters.
And in parenting, by degree, you added a second term
called paramedic helicoptering.
Tell us what you mean by these two terms
and why they're important.
The paramedic helicoptering could involve social elements
that would be so severe as to derail a child from their path.
But the pink helicopters were predominantly
interested in producing a particular type of femininity.
And the idea there was that for these women,
their class reproduction projects
were closely linked to their ability
to be particular types of women.
It's supergendered that these women would marry wealthy men
and that their success would be predominantly
through his success.
Paramedic helicoptering was much more oriented
to supporting a different model of professional women's success
where they anticipated their daughters weren't
going to marry into wealth that instead, the women's own
accomplishments were pretty important for her class
project and that she might need a partner down the line who
is similarly interested in professional pursuits.
So they were kind of driven by different models
of how you get to a certain class position in life, which
led them to invest differently.
If you're really thinking that the primary mode for mobility
is marriage through a man, you're
going to invest heavily in what she's wearing,
who she knows, what she's doing socially.
If you're thinking that her primary mobility mechanism
or reproduction mechanism is through her own success,
you're going to be there with a safety net to catch her
if something throws her off a professional trajectory.
The Princeton mom, Susan Patton, spoke on this podcast
previously.
She believes that finding the right spouse
is the most important decision in life
and you shouldn't treat it like something that's just
going to happen.
You should take as much or more interest
in finding your spouse as you do in your academic career
or in your professional career.
The Princeton mom opposes finding your life partner
with dating apps or seeking out men at your local bar.
She wants women to find a mate that has similar interests,
educational attainment, and job prospects,
someone who has similar attitudes about maximizing
cultural capital and intellectual pursuits.
To do that, the best place to find that man
is at the very university that you're attending right now.
After you graduate, the boys you will meet
are less likely to be intelligent and with poor job prospects.
The Princeton mom encourages women to find 10 to 15 eligible
bachelors while at the university,
get their phone numbers and email addresses,
and follow up with them after graduation.
Laura, what do you think of the Princeton mom's advice?
Well, one thing the Princeton mom is right about
is that marriage is wildly important for people's
class trajectories.
It is very much the case that for women,
if you look at national data, that marriage
drives a lot of their class position.
And it is also the case that when women are in the top one
person of income earners, it's almost always
through their marriage to a man.
Now, I would argue that that reflects a great degree
of gender inequality in our society.
I think that the kind of advice that she's giving
works for people who are from affluent backgrounds,
and it actually does not work, even if you are at Princeton
as a low-income student, class consolidation
happens through marriage precisely
because people select people like themselves,
who have similar experiences, similar networks,
meaning that a low-income student at Princeton,
even if they were to take her advice, wouldn't work.
Some of the things that she doesn't acknowledge
and when she's talking is that her advice
reproduces class and racial privilege
in ways that are pretty insidious.
I would also argue that for the women in my sample that did not
take her advice, did not write down the numbers,
weren't interested in doing that during college,
they ended up just fine.
They did marry men who were successful,
and they were peer partners.
So these were men who are more egalitarian,
more interested in having a household structure that
allowed for women to be equals.
Princeton is very different than UC Merced.
Looking at the gender breakdown at UC Merced,
there are 9% more females than males.
Top American universities have gender distribution,
but ever else, there are a super majority of women.
What are the implications of this gender imbalance?
Going back to the Indiana farm girl
that you met on that very first day of college
when you were in RA, her high school boyfriend
drops out of college and she ends up transferring
to Indiana's Valparaiso campus,
where she graduates with a degree in nursing.
She marries him and does not achieve the same economic status
as her roommate from Highland Park,
who met her banker spouse when she moved to Lincoln Park
after graduation.
In general, women are kicking ass and taking names
in education in ways that men aren't.
The fact that more privileged institutions
have more gender even distributions,
I would highly suspect that there's some,
I don't want to call it affirmative action for men,
but they're very careful to ensure
that there are equal distribution.
Another thing that's going on here is that
in underrepresented communities,
or folks are economically or racially marginalized,
women are the ones that are more upwardly mobile.
They are the ones that are leaving to go to college
and their male peers are not.
What this does create, as you aptly suggest,
is a dynamic in which women who are disadvantaged
tend to find themselves on college campuses
without the men or the boys that they grew up with.
This means that if they want to be upwardly mobile,
they have to cut ties with the people,
the places that feel comfortable with them.
It's a really unfortunate and not okay choice to have to make,
whereas privileged women are able to be
in upwardly mobile spaces.
They are able to connect with people who are in their networks
who follow them along to college,
and so they are not making hard choices like,
am I going to be with somebody that feels familiar
and is from home, or am I going to be successful in my career?
That's not a fair choice.
A lot of the less privileged women end up excluded
from the social spaces in which privileged men are,
and those partnerships are not really available to them.
So they're more likely to be single and to try to find someone
later in their professional careers,
but they don't have the same access to partners
that are equally educated and on the same kind
of professional trajectory.
In the second published book entitled Parenting By Degree,
you interview the mothers and fathers of the students
on the RA Florida, Indiana.
As a dad of college students, I was interested to see
what the other dads had to say.
What you found was that the mothers were much more involved
than dads in the daughters college experience.
Mom gave advice about relationships, sorority parties,
housing vacations, and all daily interactions.
Dad helped out when something broke.
Tell us about dads helping daughters in college.
The most successful fathers were those who were paramedics,
where there was some safety net provided
and parents would swoop in if there was an emergency,
but there wasn't this constant hovering presence
dictating every move that students made.
In those families, dads were able to take as active a role
as mothers and they had really good relationships
with their daughters.
They were involved, they knew what was going on.
In the case of the helicopter parents,
the mothers did almost all the work
and the fathers, as you noted, were fairly checked out.
And in those households, the kind of relationship
between the daughter and the father was more distant.
My daughter is a second semester senior
at the University of Pennsylvania,
and before classes started this semester,
my daughter said to me,
Dad, it's my last semester in college.
I know you've wanted me to take specific classes.
I'm gonna let you select
what are my classes this semester.
What'd you pick?
I said the question, answers itself.
It's my favorite class at Warren.
It's introduction to corporate finance.
So she said, Dad, I'll do it for you.
I called her a few hours after that first class
and I said, how was it?
And she said, I dropped it.
I said, oh, come on, Hannah, this is it.
This is the only thing I've asked you to do.
And you gave it only 90 minutes
and then abandoned the plan.
She said, Dad, what's your second favorite choice?
I said, I don't know, investments.
And she said, Dad, it's at nine o'clock in the morning.
Now, what's your third choice?
And I said, how about legal studies?
You can take a class in torts and she said, fine.
So at least it's something.
It's not my first choice.
But I think it's indicative of how limited
the father's role in all of this.
I had no influence on her choice of major.
I don't have any influence on the curriculum
or course selection.
I'm rarely caught upon for any advice.
When you talk about quality and parental involvement,
what are you talking about?
I doubt that your wife probably has all that much
involvement in curriculum either, to be honest.
Probably most of what she's doing is fielding all questions
that are about social dynamics, living logistics,
emotional breakdowns.
In paying for the party, you discuss
the importance of choosing a major.
Indiana has an excellent undergraduate business school,
but they also offer business light courses
and majors that frankly aren't that useful in the job market.
You said that the university was not transparent with students
as to the economic consequences of choosing a major that
maximizes lifetime income.
Parents can sometimes be helpful in navigating these mine fields.
Why does the university provide insufficient information
about the monetary consequences of choosing a major?
If you're wealthy enough and you have the right connections,
you just want your kid to graduate.
But most people, that is not the situation they're in.
Families and students are trusting
that the majors that are available at the university
are appropriate link to career paths
and are going to be successful for their students.
And so that's where you get that disconnect
because universities are trying to bring in some students
and some dollars and parents are trying to get their students
to be stable and successful.
And that doesn't always match up.
Is there a tension within the school departments?
I'll give you an example.
In my alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania,
Penn has four undergraduate schools, nursing, engineering,
College of Arts and Sciences, and the Wharton Business School.
The students enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences
transferred to Wharton when they hear
that the Wharton graduates have superior job prospects
because of the business degree.
The faculty in the liberal arts do not like it
when their best and brightest transfer
to the Wharton Business School.
Since I graduated, the university has made it
more difficult to transfer.
Why aren't the needs of the students paramount
and the faculty desires less important?
Part of those tensions that you mentioned
between departments over the loss of students
have developed as funding models have shifted.
The tension arises because the administration says,
we are going to take resources from
and never let units hire unless they get more students
enrolled in their classes.
And then it becomes like a fight over the students
across campus.
So that's a pretty bad dynamic.
There's some emerging research that people
with business degrees often end up moving into jobs
where they're not actually using the skills
that they earned in their business classes,
but they're often drawing on skills they might have learned
in classes that are writing heavy or communication heavy.
There's a bit of mismatch between what skills people
actually use in their jobs and what the degrees are.
A lot of English majors, for example,
will be very well suited for a fair number of business jobs.
So there seems to be also just a mismatch
between employer perception of what a worker needs
and the hiring practices.
I am sure that you're correct that English majors
write better essays than the business school graduates,
but they still earn multiples more.
And I suspect that employers generally get it right
and properly pay for performance.
Yeah, for sure.
That's the other thing we didn't mention.
Students are accruing a lot of debt
and then you're an English major
and then you're making $25,000.
You're paying back $50,000 or $100,000 of debt.
The math does not add up.
Laura, what are you optimistic about?
I am optimistic about today's youth.
I see these kids in the classroom and I tell you,
they are smart, they are resilient,
they are questioning the way we've done things
and ways that challenge adults,
they're figuring out how to make it
even under pretty adverse circumstances.
I hear a lot of griping about new generations.
That's not what I feel at all.
I feel optimistic about their prospects
even in the face of hardship.
Thanks to Laura Hamilton for joining us today.
If you missed last week's show on the opioid crisis,
check it out.
Our speaker was Gerald Posner, who wrote the book,
Pharma, Greed Lies and the Poisoning of America.
Gerald spoke about the conflict
that pharmaceutical firms face
with their desire for advancing public health
while maximizing profits.
We will also discuss the advancement
of pain management care, fears of addiction
and the success and failures of Oxygen.
I would now like to make a plug for next week's podcast
with Dan Willingham, who is a professor
of cognitive psychology at the University of Virginia.
He is the author of the new book entitled,
Out Smart Your Brain, Why Learning Is Hard
and How You Can Make It Easy.
You can find our previous episodes and transcripts
on our website, what happens next in six minutes.com.
If you enjoy today's podcast,
please subscribe to our weekly emails
and follow us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.
I would like to thank our audience
for your continued engagement with these important issues.
Goodbye.
.