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Kevin Birth's avatar

There are institutions where there is a need for more faculty and those are also the institutions that tend to have the most students from underprivileged backgrounds. In CUNY, we often teach courses with massive enrollments and get our senior-level seminars cancelled if they don't meet a minimum enrollment of 10-15. The demographic problem you mention can't be completely solved by hiring more faculty in systems like CUNY or Cal St, but those are definitely places that could use many more faculty and which also do a great deal to increase the diversity of many disciplines. Of course, as I write, the state of NY is trying to decide whether funding a new stadium for the Buffalo Bills is a greater priority than giving CUNY/SUNY money to hire more faculty and provide more support to students who struggle.

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Narsham's avatar

There was a massive expansion of colleges and universities following the end of WW2 because of the GI Bill. The ideal solution would be for the federal government to offer to pay full college costs for students who then spend several years after graduation performing some kind of public service. (Military service could count.) Advertise the program specifically to first-gen college students, kids growing up in poverty, and underrepresented groups of all sorts. Find some of the best and brightest who for whatever reason aren't attending college, get them there, and then sell them on the idea of doing public good with their talents.

If you don't drive demand for faculty, the only other solution is to choke the supply, but most of those approaches wouldn't actually work. If you could limit Physics PhD admissions to 2X where X is the number of women admitted, that would both force programs to increase X and to decrease their total admits, but I don't see how that could be achievable.

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