Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.

To build better theories of cities, companies, and other social institutions such as universities, requires that we understand the tradeoffs and complementarities that exist between their core functions, and that we understand bounds to their growth. Scaling theory has been a powerful tool for addre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ryan C Taylor, Xiaofan Liang, Manfred D Laubichler, Geoffrey B West, Christopher P Kempes, Marion Dumas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254582
_version_ 1828959194801242112
author Ryan C Taylor
Xiaofan Liang
Manfred D Laubichler
Geoffrey B West
Christopher P Kempes
Marion Dumas
author_facet Ryan C Taylor
Xiaofan Liang
Manfred D Laubichler
Geoffrey B West
Christopher P Kempes
Marion Dumas
author_sort Ryan C Taylor
collection DOAJ
description To build better theories of cities, companies, and other social institutions such as universities, requires that we understand the tradeoffs and complementarities that exist between their core functions, and that we understand bounds to their growth. Scaling theory has been a powerful tool for addressing such questions in diverse physical, biological and urban systems, revealing systematic quantitative regularities between size and function. Here we apply scaling theory to the social sciences, taking a synoptic view of an entire class of institutions. The United States higher education system serves as an ideal case study, since it includes over 5,800 institutions with shared broad objectives, but ranges in strategy from vocational training to the production of novel research, contains public, nonprofit and for-profit models, and spans sizes from 10 to roughly 100,000 enrolled students. We show that, like organisms, ecosystems and cities, universities and colleges scale in a surprisingly systematic fashion following simple power-law behavior. Comparing seven commonly accepted sectors of higher education organizations, we find distinct regimes of scaling between a school's total enrollment and its expenditures, revenues, graduation rates and economic added value. Our results quantify how each sector leverages specific economies of scale to address distinct priorities. Taken together, the scaling of features within a sector along with the shifts in scaling across sectors implies that there are generic mechanisms and constraints shared by all sectors, which lead to tradeoffs between their different societal functions and roles. We highlight the strong complementarity between public and private research universities, and community and state colleges, that all display superlinear returns to scale. In contrast to the scaling of biological systems, our results highlight that much of the observed scaling behavior is modulated by the particular strategies of organizations rather than an immutable set of constraints.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T09:03:29Z
format Article
id doaj.art-6690166afef1409885af626bd1681a15
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T09:03:29Z
publishDate 2021-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-6690166afef1409885af626bd1681a152022-12-21T23:08:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-011610e025458210.1371/journal.pone.0254582Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.Ryan C TaylorXiaofan LiangManfred D LaubichlerGeoffrey B WestChristopher P KempesMarion DumasTo build better theories of cities, companies, and other social institutions such as universities, requires that we understand the tradeoffs and complementarities that exist between their core functions, and that we understand bounds to their growth. Scaling theory has been a powerful tool for addressing such questions in diverse physical, biological and urban systems, revealing systematic quantitative regularities between size and function. Here we apply scaling theory to the social sciences, taking a synoptic view of an entire class of institutions. The United States higher education system serves as an ideal case study, since it includes over 5,800 institutions with shared broad objectives, but ranges in strategy from vocational training to the production of novel research, contains public, nonprofit and for-profit models, and spans sizes from 10 to roughly 100,000 enrolled students. We show that, like organisms, ecosystems and cities, universities and colleges scale in a surprisingly systematic fashion following simple power-law behavior. Comparing seven commonly accepted sectors of higher education organizations, we find distinct regimes of scaling between a school's total enrollment and its expenditures, revenues, graduation rates and economic added value. Our results quantify how each sector leverages specific economies of scale to address distinct priorities. Taken together, the scaling of features within a sector along with the shifts in scaling across sectors implies that there are generic mechanisms and constraints shared by all sectors, which lead to tradeoffs between their different societal functions and roles. We highlight the strong complementarity between public and private research universities, and community and state colleges, that all display superlinear returns to scale. In contrast to the scaling of biological systems, our results highlight that much of the observed scaling behavior is modulated by the particular strategies of organizations rather than an immutable set of constraints.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254582
spellingShingle Ryan C Taylor
Xiaofan Liang
Manfred D Laubichler
Geoffrey B West
Christopher P Kempes
Marion Dumas
Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
PLoS ONE
title Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
title_full Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
title_fullStr Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
title_full_unstemmed Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
title_short Systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities.
title_sort systematic shifts in scaling behavior based on organizational strategy in universities
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254582
work_keys_str_mv AT ryanctaylor systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities
AT xiaofanliang systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities
AT manfreddlaubichler systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities
AT geoffreybwest systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities
AT christopherpkempes systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities
AT mariondumas systematicshiftsinscalingbehaviorbasedonorganizationalstrategyinuniversities