Education Dept. Budgets More than $4 Million to Build College Ratings System

April 23, 2015
  • Industry News

The U.S. Education Department has budgeted more than $4 million to develop the Obama administration's college ratings system, reports Inside Higher Ed and The Chronicle of Higher Education.

The Department has a contract with the nonprofit research company, Research Triangle Institute (RTI), and has paid the firm $1.8 million so far.

The agreement, obtained by Inside Higher Ed through a Freedom of Information Act request, shows the costs associated with the rating systems as well as officials' thinking about the system. As Inside Higher Ed reported, the department has considered a formal panel to analyze the technical integrity of the rating system, create a formal process for colleges to challenge their data, and allow colleges to provide a narrative statement with their ratings.

Opponents argue that federal data about colleges' performance on many metrics are too incomplete to contribute to meaningful ratings. Critics have used the funding as a means of blocking the department from carrying out the project.

The contract shows that officials plan to finalize a ratings methodology this summer with a Sept. 1 public release date for "version 1.0" of the ratings website.

 

Related Links

Inside Higher Ed

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2015/04/20/education-department-signs-4-million-college-ratings-contract-eyes-ratings-appeals

The Chronicle of Higher Education

http://chronicle.com/blogs/ticker/cost-of-college-ratings-for-education-dept-at-least-4-million/97553