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US: Bush education proposals target community college students
By Charles Bogle
31 October 2003
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The US Congress is presently considering the ultimate form
of the Higher Education Reauthorization Act for 2004, which will
likely establish federal priorities for colleges and universities
for the next decade. As was the case with the first version of
this act in 1965, which was aimed at defusing the deepening social
crisis created by the Vietnam War and social inequalities at home,
the majority of issues are concerned with increasing access to
and completion of higher education programs and degrees.
Through its various reauthorizations, the act has attained
a degree of success by creating Educational Opportunity Grants,
the Special Services for the Disadvantaged program (which provided
tutoring, counseling and remedial instruction to low-income students)
and Pell Grants (financial awards, based on demonstrated needs,
to help undergraduate students pay for their education). However,
several proposals for the 2004 version of the Reauthorization
Act threaten to take it in a new and dangerous direction, especially
for community colleges and their working class students.
In the past, only those higher education institutions whose
accreditation was recognized by the Department of Education were
eligible to offer financial aid to their students. If the Bush
administration and its congressional voices have their way, however,
the 2004 version will essentially separate accreditation from
financial aid eligibility by tying public funding to an institutions
ability to retain students and graduate them as rapidly as possible.
The introduction of free market methods into higher education
will most severely harm community colleges and their working class
students.
Supporters of the Higher Education Reauthorization Act for
2004 are claiming to be responding to the needs of low-income
students and their parents calls for accountability.
John Boehner, chairman of the Committee on Education and the Workforce,
applauded Bushs fiscal year Education Budget for major
increases in funding for Pell Grants and minority-serving
institutions of higher learning.
In fact, the 2004 Reauthorization Act would increase spending
for Pell Grants by $1.9 billion (Committee on Education and the
Workforce Press Release, February 2003). However, the same press
release admits to working under the assumption that the
significant surge in the Pell Grant applicant growth rate over
the past few years will begin to level off, and that if
this leveling doesnt occur, Pell Grant program costs
would significantly increase above the budget estimates.
Anyone who has applied for a job recently or followed the news
knows that the committees assumption does not stand up to
scrutiny: the economic conditions that have resulted in the record-setting
increase in Pell Grant applications are only worsening, and many
states have already announced even more cuts in funding for higher
education in 2004. While more students undoubtedly will be forced
to apply for Pell Grants, the commission offers no contingency
plan for this eventuality.
More threatening to the community college mission of offering
a higher education for everyone is the acts proposed interpretation
of accountability. While the Education Department has indicated
that the Bush administration is six to eight months away
from unveiling its recommendation for reauthorization, the
administration did, in March 2002, release a five-year strategic
plan for the Education Department that defined accountability
in terms of a postsecondary institutions ability to retain
students and graduate them in a timely fashion (Bushs
Next Target? The Chronicle of Higher Education, July
11, 2003).
More specifically, according to the June 2003 issue of MEA
Voice, the monthly publication of the Michigan Education Association,
some members of Congress have talked about linking federal
aid to minimum graduation rates at two- and four-year colleges,
or those institutions could lose some federal funding.
This proposals unstated assumption is that colleges and
universities should compete with each other in a market atmosphere
and that, to take market-driven logic a step further, all colleges
and universities are playing on a level playing field. But how
could a community college compete for funding with a private school
or even a selective state university?
More than any other institution of higher learning, community
colleges are democratic. The community or junior college
movement began in the late 19th century as a means of offering
higher education to young people who had graduated from public
high schools but who could neither afford the cost nor meet the
requirements of exclusive four-year colleges and universities.
Today, there are 1,166 community colleges in the United States
operating under an open-door admissions policy. They are also
required to meet multiple needs: preparing students for four-year
colleges and universities; offering program and certificate degrees
in specific disciplines (e.g., industrial positions, computer
programming and the health care field) and providing the opportunity
for adults to take a class or two for the sake of career advancement
or simple enjoyment.
While the student profile at a community college will of course
vary depending upon location, at the great majority of community
colleges the average student is non-traditional. Barry
Stearns, current president of the National Council for Higher
Education and an instructor at Lansing [Michigan] Community College,
reports that We have many so-called non-traditional students
who are raising families, or who have full- or part-time jobs
and may be taking a class that will help them in their jobs
(MEA Voice, June 2003).
Because so many community college students do hold down jobs
while raising families, they can only take classes part-time.
At Monroe County Community College (also in Michigan), certainly
not an atypical example, 2,431 part-time students were enrolled
for the fall 2002 semester compared to 1,397 full-time students.
To be considered a full-time student, one must take at least 12
credit hours per semester. If we multiply this number by four
(the number of semesters making up a two-year sequence), and consider
that many associates degrees now require the successful
completion of 60+ credit hours, we find that even full-time students,
let alone part-time students, are hard pressed to graduate in
two years.
With this mission and student population, community colleges
will, if forced to compete for funding with more selective colleges
and universities, have little choice but to dilute their coursework
so that more students complete their associates degrees
and certificates in the required amount of time. Unfortunately,
students who earn these diluted degrees and certificates will
be at a decided disadvantage when they enter a four-year school
or enter the job market.
Tying federal funding to graduation rates could have the effect
of channeling public resources to private universities. This no
doubt is one aim of the Bush administration. Its ultimate goal,
however, is to turn higher learning into a private, profit-driven
industry. As with the assault on other publicly run institutions,
privatizing community colleges will have the most adverse effect
on the working class, depriving the majority of young people of
the right to higher education.
See Also:
Cuts in education funding
will improve academic performance. Honest.
[28 August 2003]
Community colleges in US facing
massive cutbacks: Michigan highlights assault on education
[20 May 2003]
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