Graduation rates: student services may outweigh instruction or research
Researchers at the Cornell Higher Education Research Institute have found that a $500 increase in per-student expenditures on student services correlates with a 0.7% increase in graduation rates. The same additional $500, when directed toward instruction, correlates with 0.3% graduation gains. When directed toward research, the additional $500 correlates negatively with graduation rates.
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Read the full Cornell Higher Education Research Institute working paper on graduation rates and non-instructional university expenditures:













