As the economic value of education increases, as more students seek to
complete college courses while forgoing the undergraduate experience,
and as funding for public higher education decreases, the for-profit
higher education sector has exploded. In New Players, Different Game,
William G. Tierney and Guilbert C. Hentschke compare for-profit and
not-for-profit models of higher education to assess the strengths and
weaknesses of both.
For-profit institutions offer a fundamentally distinct type of
postsecondary education. Some critics argue the institutions are so
different they should not be accepted as an integral part of the
American higher education system. Here, Tierney and Hentschke explore
what traditional and nontraditional colleges and universities can learn
from each other, comparing how they recruit students, employ faculty,
and organize instructional programs. The authors suggest that, rather
than continuing their standoff, the two sectors could mutually benefit
from examining each other's culture, practices, and outcomes.