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Running the Numbers: Compensation in the 2011 “Great Colleges to Work For”

  
  

describe the imageIn Section B of its July 29, 2011, issue, The Chronicle of Higher Education provides the results of its 2011 “Great Colleges to Work For” survey.  Jointly sponsored by The Chronicle and ModernThink LLC, this is the fourth such effort and is apparently inspired by and loosely based upon the Great Place to Work Institute’s well known Fortune magazine “100 Best Companies to Work For” list.

To compile the 2011 Great Colleges data, The Chronicle and ModernThink polled 111,000 people (and about 44,000 responded) at 310 colleges and universities, of which 245 (79%) are 4-year institutions.  Twelve “recognition categories” were selected for comparison.  One of these, “Compensation and Benefits,” is defined as “Pay is fair, and benefits meet the needs of employees.”  We took a look behind the numbers for the comp and benefits category for the 4-year colleges to see what they show.

First, The Chronicle divides institutions on the basis of the total number of students:

  • Small (2,999 or fewer) [24 institutions]
  • Medium (3,000 to 9,999) [31 institutions]
  • Large (10,000 or more) [30 institutions]

Then it discloses “average annual salary” for:

  • Administrators
  • Full-time exempt staff
  • Exempt professional staff

And depending upon their success at satisfying the requirements of each recognition category, the paper awards an “Honor Roll” mention for 10 schools in each size classification.

How do the numbers for the 85 colleges and universities shake out?  In other words, how great is the compensation in the Great Colleges?

Small Colleges and Universities: Average Annual Salaries

 

Administrators

Minimum

$60,526

Manchester College

Median

$89,986

 

Maximum

$163,663

MGH Institute of Health Professions

 

Full-time Faculty

Minimum

$43,906

Mid-Continent University

Median

$67,258

 

Maximum

$115,000

U.S. Coast Guard Academy

 

Exempt Professional Staff

Minimum

$30,779

Brenau University

Median

$43,446

 

Maximum

$100,000

U.S. Coast Guard Academy

 

Medium Colleges and Universities: Average Annual Salaries

 

Administrators

Minimum

$61,020

York College of Pennsylvania

Median

$90,500

 

Maximum

$168,850

Abilene Christian University

 

Full-time Faculty

Minimum

$56,000

Gardner-Webb University

Median

$73,250

 

Maximum

$116,522

Babson College

 

Exempt Professional Staff

Minimum

$33,321

Union University

Median

$50,816

 

Maximum

$85,333

Ramapo College of New Jersey

 

Large Colleges and Universities: Average Annual Salaries  

 

Administrators

Minimum

$51,262

Murray State University

Median

$104,375

 

Maximum

$212,571

Georgia Institute of Technology

 

Full-time Faculty

Minimum

$60,533

Indiana Wesleyan University

Median

$83,699

 

Maximum

$169,900

Harvard University

 

Exempt Professional Staff

Minimum

$43,103

University of West Florida

Median

$57,607

 

Maximum

$89,114

Harvard University

 
Here, the disclosed compensation is not overly rich.  Notably, there is not a dramatic variation in compensation from small to large school within the three professional fields (the largest being the 48% difference in faculty maximums from small to large).  This may imply a level paying field in academe absent within, say, the financial services industry.  However, it would be risky to use the figures provided by The Chronicle for aspirational purposes.  The data here reflects a mere 85 schools among thousands of American institutions.  And the information provided to support the results is incomplete: no value is provided for the cost of benefits, and compensation is rendered solely in terms of salary.  Total compensation in the field of higher education can include amounts for bonuses, deferred compensation, and other sums.  Given the incompleteness of the data, it may be that the best The Chronicle can conclude, in the 30 instances where the compensation and benefits recognition category has been met among 85 schools, is that “Pay is fair, and benefits meet the needs of employees.”

The compensation and benefits results (only) for the 2011 Great Colleges to Work For may be useful as far as they go.  We just don’t know how far that is.     

Paul Creasy

 

 

Comments

Is this three category 1) Administrator 2) Fulltime 3) excempt employess are preliminary categories before categorize jobs into job family or this is a common practice to have only main three groups for Educational Insititution, what about job evaluation and market-benchmarking?
Posted @ Wednesday, August 03, 2011 1:26 PM by Yasmin
While we did not conduct the Great Colleges survey, these generic categories would not be unusual for higher education. There would be specific jobs/titles within these categories that would have varying levels of pay. These pay levels would be established in accordance with college or university policy that may or may not utilize job evaluation, market pricing, etc.
Posted @ Friday, August 05, 2011 2:47 PM by Paul Creasy
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