$5M for 30 seconds — $0 for education

There are times when I am baffled by our priorities — or lack thereof! How is it that we are all interested in the Super Bowl and willing to spend billions, yet when it comes to our schools and colleges, we don’t have money to meet their needs?

Case in point… In one afternoon, billions were spent on the advertisements we saw during Super Bowl 50. Companies invested an average of $5 million for a 30-second ad — $166,666 per second. That did not include the price of creating the ad, the publicity around the ad or the campaign. One source estimated that a full campaign would cost more than $30 million. Doing a quick count, more than 50 companies ran Super Bowl ads, bringing the total spend to well over $1.5 billion.

For the 70,000-plus who attended the game, the story was not much different. While the lucky ones received a free pass, a few fans were even able to get a ticket at face value. Most tickets were only available via resale with an average ticket price upwards of $5,000.” Add to that the cost of round trip airfare, and we are talking another $900. Then there is the hotel. A 3-star in San Francisco ran between $125-$900 a night. The average Airbnb listing in Santa Clara for Feb. 6 to 8 was $612 a night, with some listings as high as $10,000 for the weekend. And don’t forget the food, parking, souvenirs and total NFL experience. Fans were likely to spend $8,000-plus on the experience bringing that total spend to over $550 million only counting those who attended the game.

So how does this compare? In the 2014-15 school year, the current expenditure per pupil in public elementary and secondary schools was $10,851. I wouldn’t even dare compare the salary of a player or manager to that of a teacher or administrator, or the cost of providing adequate security for game day to the monies spent on school security for the entire school year.

I grew up in Pittsburgh, and in the 70’s lived and breathed football in the days of Bradshaw and the “Steel Curtain.” Like most everyone else, I love football and would be excited to attend the big game. What I don’t like are the messages I keep hearing that say we don’t have the money to adequately support education, or that we are once again going to have to raise tuition to make ends meet. If billions can be spent in one day on a sporting event, don’t you think we should be able to find support for education?

This article originally appeared in the issue of .

Featured

  • Recent University of Pennsylvania Projects Receive LEED Certifications

    The University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Penn., recently announced that three of its recent construction projects have earned LEED certifications, according to university news. The Vagelos Laboratory for Energy Science and Technology (VLEST) received a LEED Platinum certification, Amy Gutmann Hall a LEED Gold, and the OTT Center for Track and Field a LEED silver.

  • ClassVR Wins Tech & Learning Best of Show at ISTELive 25

    Avantis Education recently announced that its flagship product, ClassVR, won the Tech & Learning Best of Show Award at ISTELive 25 in San Antonio, Texas, according to a news release. The program is designed to celebrate products that are “transforming education in schools around the world and that show the greatest promise for the industry,” and this is the fourth consecutive year that Avantis has claimed the award.

  • Embry-Riddle Breaks Ground on New Office Building

    Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU) in Daytona Beach, Fla., recently announced that construction has begun on a new office building for its campus Research Park, according to a news release. The university partnered with Hoar Construction on the 34,740-square-foot Center for Aerospace Technology II (CAT II), which will be used for research and lab purposes.

  • A university

    Breaking Higher Education's Billion-Dollar Backlog Problem

    Strategic mechanical system design can transform campus maintenance backlogs. Here's how.