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Four-year schools get bigger share of revenue pie

Tthe more elite an institution is, the more public money it gets. Higher education traditionally has favored the best and brightest. But that status quo increasingly is being challenged, buttressed by growing consensus that the nation’s best and brightest alone can’t keep the U.S. workforce afloat in an increasingly global economy.

Today, the more urgent need is to ensure that more people complete at least some higher education, says a paper distributed this spring to presidential candidates. And “the fastest, most effective way” to achieve that is to focus on helping students who are most at risk of failing, says the paper by the non-profit State Higher Education Executive Officers.