The Higher Education industry in the U.S. simultaneously craves hierarchies while also seeking to abolish them. The organization that decides which institution gets the designation of “R1” is a non-profit/non-government organization made up of a bunch of participating colleges and universities. The designation was originally conceived of as an easy way for people outside the industry to know which schools were spending the most resources on research, but it eventually became just another promotional/recruiting tool.Physics Guy wrote: ↑Fri Aug 30, 2024 6:29 amIf those are the criteria then I reckon all German universities must be R1 by considerable margins, like factors of two to four or more. It’s a different system here.
To the surprise of absolutely no one, it turned out that the wealthiest schools spent the most on research. Considering that many of the “elite” institutions have endowments with a larger monetary value than some of the GDPs of European countries (*cough*Harvard*cough*), the R1 list isn’t going to expand much and will only contain the kind of institutions one would expect to see on there anyways.
A school like BYU just isn’t going to catch up (unless the Church decided to start pouring billions of dollars into it) and to make the R1 designation easier to obtain, the decision was made to simply say, “spend 50 million on research and kick out 70 PhDs a year regardless of what other institutions are spending or how many PhDs they churn out and we’ll give you the designation so you can start including it on you recruitment material.”
Easily over a 100 schools are gonna qualify for R1 now and every single one of them will act as if this was an achievement on their part.