A blog created by the community of EOL 574 to converse in an open space about contemporary issues related to diversity in higher education.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Obama and Duncan Begin Push to Avoid Doubling of Student-Loan Interest Rate
Educational Testing Service Will Allow GRE Test Takers to Choose Best Scores
Scott Jaschik
The Educational Testing Service is announcing today that applicants to graduate school will no longer have to submit all their scores on the Graduate Record Examinations, but will have the option to select the best scores to share.
The move is similar to one made by the College Board with regard to the SAT in 2008. For test takers who worry about having an “off day,” the shift is likely to be popular, as they will gain the option of retaking the test without flagging for admissions offices that they once had a low score. ETS will require an entire administration to be submitted, so a test-taker couldn't submit part of a GRE score from one day and another from another day.
ETS may gain from the move in its competition with the Graduate Management Admission Council. ETS has been promoting the GRE for use in business school admissions. While the GMAC’s Graduate Management Admission Test is the dominant exam in M.B.A. admissions, that test is not focused on business-related questions, and ETS has been encouraging applicants to submit GRE scores instead of GMAT scores. Currently all GMAT scores must be submitted, so the new GRE policy could sway some business school applicants to consider that exam. But ETS is also facing some questions over whether the move will simply encourage more students to take the test multiple times, and to get expensive test coaching (practices typically utilized by wealthier applicants, but not those from low income levels.)
David Payne, vice president and chief operation officer for higher education at ETS, said that the organization wanted "to give test takers more confidence on test day and encourage more people to pursue graduate or business school." And he said that ETS was going to expand its fee waiver program (the basic fee is $160 in the United States), which has been limited to one per individual, so that people could seek waivers on more than one examination. He said that research by ETS suggests that all test-takers will have "more confidence," knowing of the new policy.
Bob Ludwig, director of public affairs at GMAC, said that group does not plan to match ETS on score choice, and that there is value (to admissions officers) in reporting all scores. "GMAT test reports are reported fairly. They have a full report of a candidate's testing history, and admissions officers look at the GMAT for more, not less insight into a candidate's skills and abilities." Sometimes, he said that look may result in information that favors a candidate, as when a candidate submits two scores, and did better on one portion on one test and an another portion on the second test. But whether the full testing history helps or hurts a candidate, "admissions departments tell us that they want the full picture," Ludwig said.
Payne of ETS said that graduate programs that want all test scores could tell applicants of such a requirement.
Generally, those who rely on standardized admissions testing or who track the industry agreed that applicants would like the concept of score choice being applied to the GRE.
"Applicants will love it, as they ask us this all the time if we can select the 'best scores' for their application," said Thomas P. Rock, executive director of enrollment services at Teachers College, Columbia University. Rock said that admissions officers at his institutions in fact want to view “the score that puts the applicant in the best possible light,” but he added that there may be other things that could be lost with score choice. "From our perspective, we do like to receive the full picture to see how many times a student has taken the GRE and whether they have improved over time," he said. "The current system of receiving scores allows us to consider everything in an individualized and holistic manner."
Robert Schaeffer, public education director for FairTest: National Center for Fair and Open Testing (a group that regularly criticizes ETS), said that the change "is certainly good for test takers because it eliminates the possibility that one day's poor performance becomes a 'Scarlet Letter' permanently attached to an individual's record."
But Schaeffer was skeptical that ETS was acting only out of concern for the stress of test takers. He said that the ETS bottom line would benefit because of an improved position for the GRE versus the GMAT, and a likely increase in the number of people taking the GRE multiple times. "It will encourage some aspiring grad school students to take the GRE more often, knowing that a poor score can be withheld, thus treating it as a practice test until a desirable result is obtained," he said.
Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/04/24/ets-will-allow-gre-takers-select-which-scores-report#ixzz1szsE3uar
Inside Higher Ed
Education for All? 2-Year Colleges Struggle to Preserve Their Mission
Opportunities Denied
Remediating a Problem
Shifting Missions
The Real Cost of Education
http://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/2012/04/23/is-education-still-worth-debt/
Monday, April 23, 2012
Creating a 'place' for Higher Education
Thursday, April 12, 2012
ICE grants DREAM Act student another year in AZ
CBS 5 News has learned that an illegal immigrant who grew up in Arizona and dreamed of becoming a U.S. Marine will not be deported Tuesday after all.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement has reversed its earlier decision and granted Pedro Gutierrez, of Casa Grande, an additional year in the United States, according to Mo Goldman, the attorney for Gutierrez, on Thursday.
ICE confirmed to CBS 5 News that it has granted the reprieve, a move Goldman called "good news."
ICE spokeswoman Amber Cargile said the stay of removal for one year was based on humanitarian grounds.
Gutierrez was granted a one-year stay in 2011 after support from numerous activists organizations.
Gutierrez was brought to Arizona by his grandmother when he was 7 years old. After she died, Gutierrez went on to graduate from high school with the support of his community.
Without immigration papers, all he had to count on for his future was the DREAM Act, which lawmakers were unable to pass.
Had the legislation been enacted, Gutierrez would have had the opportunity to attain citizenship once he completed at least two years in the armed forces.
In 2009, a traffic violation - driving without a license - landed him in jail and subsequent ICE investigation.
He was due to be deported January 2011, but the massive outpouring of support helped him gain a 30-day stay, followed by a year-long stay that would have ended next week.
"If I go back to Mexico, I have no home there, I have no family, no friends, nothing," Gutierrez told CBS 5's Donna Rossi. "If I go back, I'll be homeless."
Gutierrez has an 8-month-old daughter and a 4-year-old stepson.
This article is very interesting what are your thoughts??
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Future of Liberal Arts College
I'm not sure about you, but to me it would seem as though Colleges and Universities should be willing to reach beyond their majority population to encourage others to attend. And what is to be said about the use of "traditional areas of strength" especially when Weiss projects "Within 10 years, nonwhite children will make up more than half of all children in the United States, rising to 62 percent by midcentury".
Read the article here A President Surveys the Future of Liberal Arts Colleges
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
For Student Success, Stop Debating and Start Improving
I have seen up close the multiple challenges that face higher education in these times of budget cuts and increased public concern over the value and cost of college. Yet in my experience, three broad but unproductive areas of debate distract us from solving the central challenges. Here's what ought to be happening:
1) Institutions should improve student success by focusing on practices within their control instead of blaming external factors.
2) Give students more-structured academic programs that accelerate their progress toward degrees.
3) Accept that preparing for work and pursuing a liberal-arts education are not mutually exclusive.
What are we learning about the best path forward to solve the real problems? While critics worry that the Gates Foundation may try to force its agenda on higher education, we see our role as funding diverse approaches that allow higher education to create its own solutions. With that in mind, I suggest the following priorities for our concerted attention:
- Optimize the rich higher-education "ecosystem" we've got. America's vaunted higher-education system is not just about public and private nonprofit four-year colleges. Community colleges are an underresourced asset for states and students. The best for-profit institutions offer nimbleness, capacity, and innovation that the rest of higher education can learn from. We need a range of institutions, with better connections among them.
- Fundamentally rethink how we as a society finance the public good of higher education. The disinvestment in public higher education over the past two decades has shifted greater costs and risks to students and their families, and has especially hurt the open-access two- and four-year colleges that educate the majority of college students. Restructure funding streams to motivate institutions to offer, and students to achieve, high-quality credentials, at a reasonable cost and time to degree completion.
- Break the tyranny of the credit hour and ease transfers among institutions. We need the best researchers and the most gifted teachers in higher education to focus on these challenges—like Harvard's Eric Mazur, who has radically redesigned his physics course based on research showing that students in the traditional lecture format had not learned as much as he thought.
- Use all means to increase personalization and student success. The most powerful forms of technology are not simply putting traditional education online but are transforming the process to maximize learning and retention. The tools need not be high tech: Mentors dedicated to helping students navigate their degree programs, like those at Western Governors University, help students persist and succeed. That kind of differentiated role will especially be needed in an "unbundled" world of free course content, where added value will come from figuring out how to support student motivation and progress.
- Accelerate innovations aimed at increasing value while decreasing cost. The Gates Foundation's third Next Generation Learning Challenge attracted strong proposals to create delivery models that can serve a minimum of 5,000 students at a cost of $5,000 or less, with completion rates of 50 percent or more.
- Build organizational infrastructures to guide colleges through this crucial transformation and develop a new breed of leaders to support it. Unlike K-12, which has a wide array of organizations and leaders dedicated to reform (New Leaders for New Schools, new approaches to talent development, technical-assistance providers), this is nascent in higher education.
- Welcome data and be transparent about results. You can't get better unless you know where you are. Institutions and states should focus first on using data to learn how to drive improvement, rather than move to premature accountability systems.
Hilary Pennington is an expert on postsecondary education, most recently serving as director of education, postsecondary success, and special initiatives at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Link to full article.
http://www.jbhe.com/2012/04/black-and-minority-students-are-being-squeezed-out-of-community-colleges/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=black-and-minority-students-are-being-squeezed-out-of-community-colleges
Oklahoma Education Department Officials Implicated in Scam
A state audit released Wednesday has revealed that the Oklahoma State Education Department used two undisclosed bank account as entertainment expense slush funds, spending over $2.3m over the decade.
“These off-book and unauthorized accounts allowed (Education Department) officials to pay, at a single event, $2,600 for 85 bottles of wine and 3 kegs of beer and $5,700 for food items including a ‘chocolate fountain,’ ‘Maryland crabcakes,’ ‘mini beef wellingtons,’ and ‘smoked salmon mousse in a puff pastry,’ without following any of the requirements normally associated with government expenditures,” the report from the state Auditor and Inspector’s Office says.The accounts were set up under the leadership of former state schools Superintendent Sandy Garrett who was in office from 1990 to 2010.
The slush funds allowed Education Department officials to pay for alcohol, food and lodging “shielded from governmental oversight as well as public scrutiny.”
Garrett denies any misuse of funds, claiming that the scandal is simply a misunderstanding and that the funds creation and use was approved by the attorney general at the time.
“I’ve been in public office for a long time and the last thing I would condone or approve is any type of illegal activity,”A major issue with the use of the accounts is that they show expenditure for wine, beer and various luxury food items. However taxpayer funds cannot be used to pay for food or beverages, and any agency wishing to serve such items would need to solicit private donations to cover the cost.
“Anytime you gather funds as a state employee, on state time, those funds should be deposited into a state account. Obviously, that didn’t happen,” state Auditor and Inspector Gary Jones said. “When you start looking at how the money was spent, I think there were obviously ways the money was spent that were not legal, like alcohol.”The attorney general’s office is currently reviewing the audit and it is currently unclear what action will be taken by law enforcement officials.
Do you think this audit ruins the reputation of the Education Department? Do you think this will deter other prospective students (undergraduate/graduate) to apply and attend the university?
Over 20 Years, State Support for Public Higher Education Fell More Than 25 Percent
Here is the original article:
This report examines how state disinvestment in public higher education over the past two decades has shifted costs to students and their families. Such disinvestment has occurred alongside rapidly rising enrollments and demographic shifts that are yielding more economically, racially, and ethnically diverse student bodies. As a result students and their families now pay—or borrow—a lot more for a college degree or are getting priced out of an education that has become a requirement for getting a decent job and entering the middle class.
This study traces trends in the size and composition of the young adult population and analyzes patterns in state support for public higher education over the past two decades. Trends in tuition and financial aid are also examined and policy recommendations are presented for ways to renew America’s commitment to nurturing a strong and inclusive middle class through investments in public higher education.
Key highlights of the report include:
College Population Trends
- Compared to the generation that came of age in the 1990s, the current population of young adults is much larger in size, much more racially and ethnically diverse, and more apt to enroll in college than the generation that came of age in the 1990s.
- Public institutions have played an important role in serving the growing numbers of undergraduate students. Public institutions absorbed 65.6 percent of the undergraduate enrollment increases that have occurred since 1990.
State Investment in Higher Education
- A review of financial data from 1990 onwards suggests that a structural change in state support for higher education is underway.
- While state spending on higher education increased by $10.5 billion in absolute terms from 1990 to 2010, in relative terms, state funding for higher education declined. Real funding per public full-time equivalent student dropped by 26.1 percent from 1990-1991 to 2009-2010.
- Over the past 20 years there has been a breakdown in the historical funding pattern of recessionary cuts and expansionary rebounds. The length of time for higher education funding to recover following recessions has lengthened for every downturn since 1979 with early evidence suggesting that the recovery from the Great Recession will be no different.
Patterns in Tuition and Financial Aid
- As state support has declined, institutions have balanced the funding equation by charging students more. Between 1990-1991 and 2009-2010, published prices for tuition and fees at public four-year universities more than doubled, rising by 116 percent, after adjusting for inflation, while the real price of two-year colleges climbed by 71 percent.
- In many states, the tuition increases of the past 20 years have occurred alongside expansions in state-sponsored financial aid programs. However, an increasing percentage of that aid is taking the form of merit-based aid which is awarded without regard for students’ financial situations.
Challenges for Students, Families, and States
- The steady escalation in college prices has occurred alongside stagnant incomes for most American households. Median household income in the United States in 2010 was just 2.1 percent higher than in 1990.
- To bridge the gap between cost and financial aid, increasingly students are borrowing from federal loan programs and private sources like banks. The volume of outstanding student loan debt has grown by a factor of 4.5 since 1999.
This was a very interesting article to read in learning about tuition costs and families financial situations. What are your thoughts on this issue?
Backwards on Racial Understanding
This is a very interesting article that discuss students perceptions of the importance of promoting racial understanding across their undergraduate career. As stated in the article,
Here are some of the results of the study:
Importance to College Students of Promoting Racial Understanding, on Scale of 1-4
Group | Start of Frosh Year | End of Frosh Year | Senior Year |
White | 2.47 | 2.32 | 2.31 |
Black | 3.26 | 3.18 | 2.95 |
Latino | 3.13 | 2.93 | 2.82 |
Asian | 2.88 | 2.63 | 2.74 |
Contrary to the general belief, the study finds that, during the course of 4-years of college, change in racial attitudes seems to trend in a negative direction. The researchers did not find reasons as to why this is; however, they provide four circumstances that can increase student likelihood to commit to promoting racial understanding,
- interracial friendships,
- frequent discussions with other-race students,
- frequent discussions with faculty members whose views differ from their own,
- and taking courses that focus on diverse cultures and perspectives.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Chancellor asks Santa Monica College to put 2-tier plan on Hold
Any thoughts?
To read the article, go to this link:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0405-pepper-spray-20120405,0,6834089.story
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Florida Teacher Turns Failing School Around
Link to video:
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7404214n&tag=api
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Pro-Affirmative Action Suit Rejected
Recently, there have been a number of court cases regarding affirmative action and higher education. The article linked above discusses a suit that was recently rejected in the federal appeals court in California which desired to lift the state's "ban on the consideration of race or ethnicity in the admissions decisions of public colleges and universities." A similar case is before the U. S. Supreme Court regarding the University of Texas. The article also discusses a court case taking place last year which decided that Michigan could not ignore race in the admissions process of colleges and universities; however the decision was vacated and the case will be reheard.
What are others thoughts about the current state of affirmative action? Is useful, or if not, what could be used as an alternative?