What are factual reasons for why universities don’t publish degrees earned to the public, online and free?
I don’t understand the question. Do they publish other degrees? What do you mean by “publish”?
make available to public viewing online, e.g.:
STUDENT:
Joseph
DEGREE EARNED:
PhD Physics
Two reasons:
[ol]
[li]FERPA[/li][li]It’s none of your business.[/li][/ol]
The California Institute of Technology allows anyone to download and view commencement programs, which contain a full listing of everybody who got a degree that year. Here is 2010 (PDF). It’s the basic information the OP is asking about, albeit not as easily searched.
I have no idea to what extent other schools do this.
This was my knee-jerk response to the question, which in my head was worded as “why should they?”
I agree with the second reason, but the first one isn’t quite valid; degrees earned and majors can fall in the category of “directory information” under FERPA and be disclosed without the student’s express permission. However, there has to be a public notice that this info might be disclosed, and the students have to be given the opportunity to opt out.
Money.
I claim that I have a BA in math from Washington and you say prove it (for a job let’s assume). What would the school rather have happen, you look it up online for free or I pay $4 for a transcript that costs them 50 cents to process and mail?
If they’re really only charging $4, they’re not making enough money to make it worth their while, (if any)
Even if they charged more, I doubt the hassle of processing the requests justifies the effort.
I’ll join the “none of your business” crowd. A University doesn’t want heat from Alumni.
Also, if it’s an advanced degree you’re interested in, the degree-granting institution will keep a copy of the student’s dissertation in its library, and the library catalog is generally searchable for free online.
This doesn’t make sense. If all you want to document is the fact of your having a particular degree from a particular institution (rather than something specific about your GPA or the courses you took, etc.), then you can just show your actual diploma (or a photocopy thereof), which you already have in your possession. No need to pay the school for any processing costs.
I didn’t see one in the linked PDF, but our commencement program has a disclaimer that states that the info in the program is not to be construed as an official graduation list and that the Office of the Registrar is the holder of the goods as far as verification goes.
My math says that at minimum wage and allowing $0.45 for postage, that leaves 2 seconds for processing. You might be underestimating slightly their costs.
Also, what you’re likely paying for isn’t the actual piece of paper they send you but the years of record-keeping and certifying-of-correctness that went into the information on that paper.
And the “official transcript” stamp, of course.
Some of that information is out there if you know where to look.
Slightly out of date: http://math.unc.edu/department-and-its-history/phds-awarded
“We’ve always done it this way” – like ** Kimstu** mentioned about the diploma: the paradigm since what seems like forever has been that it’s up to the degreeholder to be the one who coughs up evidence of the degree to the interested party and the diploma is sufficent often enough, but if you really want “official” verification that this was for real then the institutions feel you should go through some hoops.
In a timely news item, Yahoo’s CEO is under fire for falsely claiming that he had a bachelor’s degree in computer science, and the college confirmed that his degree was in accounting. Perhaps he had authorized the disclosure.