Welcome to the Business Journal Archives
Search for articles below, or continue to the all new BusinessJournalDaily.com now.
Search
Community Colleges Key to U.S. Competitiveness
ORLANDO, Fla. -- A dramatic overhaul of the U.S. community college system is necessary to ensure that the country remains competitive. Among the findings of a new report from the American Association of Community Colleges, low student success rates and inadequate job preparation hinder middle-class students and have a devastating effect on low-income students of color.
Among the authors of the report is Jerry Sue Thornton, president of Cuyahoga Community College.
The report centers on the "Three Rs" of reform: Redesign, Reinvent and Reset. These are defined as a redesign of students' educational experiences, a reinvention of institutional roles, and a resetting of the system to create partnerships and incentives for student and institutional success. "We need to completely reimagine community colleges for today and the future," said Dr. Walter G. Bumphus, association president and CEO. "It is important that college graduates be not just globally competitive but also globally competent, understanding their roles as citizens and workers in an international context. In today's knowledge economy, intellectual capital is a nation's greatest, most renewable natural resource.
"Higher education is struggling with low student success rates and employers complain about inadequate student preparation for the job market," he continued. "Our underinvestment in higher education not only wastes our human capital, it threatens U.S. global economic leadership, contributes to the erosion of our middle class, and calls into question the viability of the American dream, with its promise of upward mobility for each generation."
The report states low student success rates and inadequate job preparation hinder middle-class students and have a devastating effect on low-income students and students of color, those often in greatest need of what community colleges have to offer.
A highly educated population is fundamental to economic growth and community colleges play a significant role in ensuring the American dream, the report found. Stepping up to this challenge will require dramatic redesign of these institutions, their mission, and, most critically, their students' educational experiences.
The report's recommendations include:
- Increase completion rates of community college credentials (certificates and associate degrees) by 50% by 2020, while preserving access, enhancing quality, and eradicating attainment gaps associated with income, race, ethnicity, and gender.
- By 2020, reduce by half the numbers of students entering college unprepared for rigorous college-level work and double the rate of students who complete developmental education programs and progress to successful completion of related freshman-level courses.
- Close the American skills gaps by sharply focusing career and technical education on preparing students with the knowledge and skills required for existing and future jobs in regional and global economies.
- Refocus the community college mission and redefine institutional roles to meet 21st-century educational and employment needs.
- Invest in support structures to serve multiple community colleges through collaboration among institutions and with partners in philanthropy, government and the private sector.
- Target public and private investments strategically to create new incentives for educational institutions and their students and to support community college efforts to reclaim the American Dream.
- Implement policies and practices that promote rigor, transparency, and accountability for results in community colleges.
"This report is intended to be a bold roadmap -- a working document -- for community colleges to use as they implement these recommendations," Bumphus said.
The report is the culmination of phase 2 of the association's 21st-Century Initiative. The overall goal of the initiative is to position community colleges to educate an additional five million students with degrees, certificates, or other credentials by 2020. The initiative is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Kresge Foundation, ACT, and the Educational Testing Service. The report was written by the 21st-Century Commission on the Future of Community Colleges, co-chaired by Augustine "Augie" Gallego, chancellor emeritus, San Diego Community College District; Kay McClenney, director, Center for Community College Student Engagement, The University of Texas at Austin; and Thornton.
Published by The Business Journal, Youngstown, Ohio.