Lehigh Football Nation
June 28th, 2011, 02:41 PM
http://lehighfootballnation.blogspot.com/2011/06/deflating-chronicle-of-higher-eds-boom.html
It's amazing to me how statistics are so frequently presented to attempt to "shock and awe" the viewer.
Today, it's the Chronicle of Higher Ed's turn to mislead using statistics:
If you haven’t seen it, you should check out Libby Sander and Andrea Fuller’s piece this week highlighting the spending patterns in lesser-known Division I programs. The story found that nearly a third of the 125 athletic departments that compete just below the NCAA’s elite level increased their expenditures by more than 40 percent during a recent five-year period. Public universities, many of them grappling with overall financial cuts, had some of the fastest-growing athletic budgets.
It sounds shocking - until you analyze the situation for, say, about five minutes.
The Knight Commission and Inside Higher Ed attempt to make the case that athletics spending grew "nearly twice as fast as academic spending." I expose their conclusions as misleading data that could be disproven in about five minutes.
It's amazing to me how statistics are so frequently presented to attempt to "shock and awe" the viewer.
Today, it's the Chronicle of Higher Ed's turn to mislead using statistics:
If you haven’t seen it, you should check out Libby Sander and Andrea Fuller’s piece this week highlighting the spending patterns in lesser-known Division I programs. The story found that nearly a third of the 125 athletic departments that compete just below the NCAA’s elite level increased their expenditures by more than 40 percent during a recent five-year period. Public universities, many of them grappling with overall financial cuts, had some of the fastest-growing athletic budgets.
It sounds shocking - until you analyze the situation for, say, about five minutes.
The Knight Commission and Inside Higher Ed attempt to make the case that athletics spending grew "nearly twice as fast as academic spending." I expose their conclusions as misleading data that could be disproven in about five minutes.