An audit has discovered misuse of funds by Oklahoma State Ed Department
lasting over a decade, with hidden money being used to pay for alcohol
and food.
“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 slush funds allowed Education Department officials to pay for
alcohol, food and lodging “shielded from governmental oversight as well
as public scrutiny.”
The accounts were set up under the leadership of former state schools
Superintendent Sandy Garrett who was in office from 1990 to 2010.
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?
Adjusted for inflation, state support for each full-time public-college
student declined by 26.1 percent from 1990 to 2010, forcing students and
their families to shoulder more of the cost of higher education at a
time when family incomes were largely stagnant, according to a report
released on Monday by the think tank Demos. The report, “The Great Cost Shift: How Higher Education Cuts Undermine the Future Middle Class,”
says that over the same 20-year period, the published tuition-and-fee
price of a four-year public-college education increased 116 percent. The
report recommends that states reform their tax systems to make more
money available for higher education, that they direct money to
need-based aid rather than merit aid, and that they make college
completion a goal of their spending.
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?
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,
"Students were asked: 'How important to you personally is helping to promote racial understanding?' The researchers write that they selected this as the question because, unlike questions about 'openness to diversity' or 'other more abstract notions of tolerance,' his question 'attempts to capture respondents’ personal commitment to improving racial understanding and may be less prone to social desirability bias.' Students were asked the question upon arriving at college, at the end of their freshman year, and at the end of their senior year."
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.
What are others thoughts as to reasons for this negative trend? What can be done to counteract it?
Recently, the Santa Monica Community College attempted to implement a 2-tier payment plan for courses offered. Although put on hold for the moment while the legality of such plan is determined, the issue will arise again. If this plan is implemented students would pay more money to enroll in courses that are high in demand (e.g., English, math). This is a result of budget cuts according to the administration. However, the burden is being placed on students. There has to be a better way. Even more, if schools begin charging more money for these in-demand courses (courses that students must take to graduate), then lower-income students would be greatly affected. It is a struggle to pay for school already. The increase in cost would be detrimental to this group of students, diversity at the institution, and the entire student population.
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
Here is a brief CBS news interview on a Florida teacher at Miramar High School. Miramar was once the worst school in Florida. Now, many of its students are not only graduating from high school, but are enrolling in, and graduating from college. For the past 4 years the band director, Alvin Davis, has had a 100% graduation rate and enrollment in college. This is great news. However, as funding is being cut for K-12 schools often money for extracurricular activities is hit hard. Since we see that these programs are working it is important that they stick around.
Link to video: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7404214n&tag=api
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?
A gunman who opened fire at Oikos University, a Christian school inOakland, Calif., this morning, killing at least seven people and wounding three others, may be in custody, police said.
"As it stands now, we are confirming that a total of 10 people were injured during this morning's shooting, seven of which are fatalities," Oakland Police Department spokeswoman Cynthia Perkins said. "One person has been taken into custody in connection with this shooting."
According to police, the gunman entered the school at 10:30 a.m., and fired multiple shots.
SWAT teams arrived shortly after the shooting and attempted to secure the area, locating victims and trying to get them to safety as they searched for the gunman.
Sources close to the investigation identified the suspect as One Goh, an American of Korean origin, according to ABC station KGO-TV in San Francisco. Police believe he was the sole shooter, but they are not ruling out the possibility of more suspects, KGO reported.
Goh was taken into custody around 11:30 a.m. at a mall in Alameda, about five miles from the school. A security guard at the South Shore Center approached Goh because he was acting suspiciously, KGO-TV reported.
Goh told the security guard he needed to speak to police because he had shot several people, the guard said. The security guard then called Alameda police. Goh was taken into custody without incident and he was later transferred to Oakland police custody, KGO reported.
A shopper at the mall who saw the man taken into custody said it occurred quietly.
"It looked like they stopped him at the door to, you know, see if he had anything in his pockets that he had stolen," Lisa Resler said. "There was no fight. He was just wearing a beanie."
Pastor Jong Kim, who founded the school about 10 years ago, told the Oakland Tribune that the shooter was a former nursing student, though he was unsure whether the man had been expelled or dropped out.
One witness described a chaotic scene in the moments after the shooting. Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union, when he first heard the shots and saw a victim run out of the building.
"I just heard more gunshots. A lady came out running and she had blood on her arm, but I didn't know how bad the wound was," Snow told KGO Radio. "She was just trying to make sure everyone was safe and took off her jacket and she had a big old hole in her arm."
Oikos University is a Christian university that focuses on nursing. The school's website describes students as "given the opportunity to obtain a Christian education that is based on solid Christian doctrine and ideology. Our main goal is to foster spiritual Christian leaders who abide by God's intentions and to expand God's nation through them."
This article speaks to various discrepancies and administrative inadequacies that impact the organizational structure of secondary educational systems. I enjoyed reading about the activism from the students perspective. It is noted in the article that 50 students were suspended for simply fighting for an education. Within the organizational structure and shifts in administration, include the "re-assignment of principals on numerous occasions, lack of consistent teachers, educators who abuse time, and shortage of textbooks." It is nice to note that teachers that abuse sick time will be reprimanded, but at what point is attention drawn to the issue of lack of resources, management and leadership in secondary institutions. It literally takes students to go through suspension and miss days of school in order for their request to be heard.
While this issue pertains to Fredrick Douglass High School (how ironic the name), mistreatment of students and denial of proper resources can be applied to various instances within the education spectrum: pre-school, elementary, junior high school, community college, and four year institutions. Students bare the grunt of the work in fighting for the education. In the instances of college students, we have to fight for resources while having the burden of paying the increasing cost to attend college. College once seen as a pathway to economic and social mobility is deterring students from enrollment. More sickening is the ill social secondary institutions that do no provide the proper leadership, teachers and resources for students that want them.
Coming from California, I often have to fight for basic resources my brothers should have. Literally, every-time I visit home, I schedule a meeting with my brothers high school counselor. I have to make sure she provides my brothers with the necessary information pertaining to college admissions. Granted there is responsibility on my siblings behalf, however educational resources should not be given to some and not to others.
I commend these students in their endeavors to fight for an education that they want. I certainly pray the bureaucracy of the education administration does not deter them from their fight for educational resources.
This article discusses the scandal of students hiring stand-in test-takers, so that they can have a chance at passing the SAT and/or ACT. Long Island County has come up with security policies that will be implemented this fall to prevent this from happening again.
1.How do you feel about the new security policies that Long Island County will be implementing this fall?
2.Do you think that these security measures are necessary? If so, why?
3.Can you think of any other ways in which this county and/or other counties can prevent students from hiring stand-in test-takers?
This is an article about a cartoon published in the student newspaper at the University of Texas Austin centering on the Trayvon Martin case. Follow the link at the top of the article to The Daily Texan's website and read some of the comments under the cartoon. What are your thoughts about the cartoon and its purpose?
In 2010 Tyler Clementi committed suicide after his roommate video tapped him with another man and put it on the web. The roommate has now been convicted of what is considered a "hate crime". This case brings to question ones privacy on a college campus and the use of technology. What do you all think?
The link below provides the actual article on the case.
I found the below article interesting especially because my mother is from northern Mexico( She was born in the same town Mitt Romney's family fled to)and to see that the violence is affecting the education (which is in many ways the ticket out) is disheartening.
A Mexican Education
Adriana Zehbrauskas, The New York Times
Empty shops and houses in downtown Monterrey, Mexico, in 2010
By Bonnie Palifka
Monterrey, Mexico
I have come to the conclusion that growing up in cold-war America was a very privileged experience. As an economic historian, I am aware that much of humanity's history, like much of the present, consists of war, conquest, violent exploitation, and general nastiness. Most of this unpleasantness has been a result of economic ambition.
Today, the situation in northern Mexico, where I live and teach, is fed not only by the demand for illegal drugs in the United States and the ease of purchasing powerful weapons just across the border, but also by the masses of desperate, urban poor in Mexico who see no hope and no legitimate economic opportunity. At the same time, they observe grotesque wealth among their country's elite and in the upper echelons of the criminal organizations.
An informal economy absorbs more than one-fourth of Mexico's labor force, but the number of unoccupied youths—who neither work nor study—is growing. In microeconomics, we teach our students two criteria for fairness: results-based (it's not fair if the results are unfair) and rules-based (it's not fair if the rules are unfair). Either way, the current outcome is not fair in Mexico.
Society here has failed to provide equal opportunities in education and employment, and basic institutions, such as the legal system,are fundamentally flawed in either design or implementation. Organized criminals have taken advantage of those flaws, corrupting the judicial system and using their resources to kidnap, steal, and extort indiscriminately.
Two years ago, two graduate students were killed in the crossfire between organized criminals and soldiers outside the campus gates of my university. The University of Texas at Austin recalled study-abroad students here and stopped approving new requests for academic exchange in Monterrey. Other colleges quickly followed suit. Now we have virtually no students from the United States, although we continue to receive students from Europe and Asia. Many of the Mexican students had already begun transferring elsewhere (both within Mexico and to the United States) because, as the children of businessmen, they were potential kidnapping targets.
By now, the shock of those graduate-student deaths has worn off, but the effects of organized crime in Mexico have worked their way into the courses I teach. In "Economic History," for example, we read in the newspaper that distributors no longer go to certain parts of the city considered too dangerous. Students see firsthand how insecurity has created a huge exodus from the criminal-controlled countryside to the city, where homebuyers opt for gated communities despite the higher prices.
In microeconomics, the drug cartels offer an example of "economies of scope," which occur when a company uses its resources to produce more than one product. The cartels' resources are guns and thugs. When the U.S. and Mexican governments cracked down on drug trafficking, the criminals diversified into other activities, like kidnapping and extortion.
A real-world example of "economies of scale" is that it costs less per kilo to take one ton of marijuana across the border in a truck than to take 10 kilos at a time stashed in the doors of an ordinary car. An example of "sunk costs": When you are deciding whether to move to the United States to give your family a safer life, the money you have invested in your house in Mexico doesn't matter.
And then there are the daily reminders of what lies beyond the classroom door. We can't ask our students to turn off their phones because their parents need to be able to locate them at all times, in case they get an extortionary phone call. As one student put it, "When I was a little girl, my siblings and I would be gone all day, at friends' houses, and our parents wouldn't know where we were, but they didn't worry. Now I have to call every hour."
One of my students missed a week of class this semester when his mother was kidnapped, and missed another when she was recovered and the entire family left the country to decompress. Obviously, that kind of stress takes a toll on grades and on our ability to teach effectively.
Yet there are many things to love about Monterrey: majestic mountains, friendly people, a strong work ethic, fresh-squeezed orange juice, and street vendors selling hot corn and sweet potatoes. It is the perfect blend of Mexico and the United States. Furthermore, working at one of Latin America's top universities has afforded me opportunities I probably would not have enjoyed elsewhere.
Ironically, one of the reasons we moved here was to escape the social ills of the United States: drugs and guns. I wanted to raise my children in a drug-free environment in which we would not have to worry about random crazy people going on shooting sprees. I am haunted by the words of Master Oogway of Kung Fu Panda: "One often meets his destiny on the road he takes to avoid it."
So what are we to do?
I remind myself daily that the odds of being killed in a car accident are greater than the probability of being caught in crossfire. If we consider only the innocent victims in the Mexican drug war, the homicide rate is lower here than in several American cities. Even including the crime-related victims, two cities in the United States still have higher homicide rates. (Interestingly, when I taught at Yale last summer, a number of well-meaning friends and family warned me that New Haven is a very dangerous place.)
Still, we take measures. Like many others here, I stay in after dark, keep a close eye on my children when we leave the house, keep a low profile on Facebook (used by some to identify potential kidnapping or extortion victims), do not engage in conspicuous consumption, turn on the air-conditioner at night to block out the sound of gunfire, and try to help others when I can. Attendance is down at evening movies and dance clubs; demand is up for homes in gated communities. We avoid, as much as possible, military convoys or places where a helicopter is circling overhead. Some professionals have gone so far as to buy "anti-kidnapping" (old) vehicles.
Mexico is a curious place to live, and to teach. Stray dogs walk on the sidewalks, while pedestrians walk in the street. The dogs, it seems, have learned that the sidewalk is safer; the people opt for the road because, well, there's dog poop on the sidewalks. That same dynamic is being played out on a societal level: The narcos have taken over the public spaces that used to be safe, while the rest of us take measures to avoid their crap.
Bonnie Palifka is an assistant professor of economics at the Tecnológico de Monterrey. The opinions expressed here are personal and do not represent the Tec de Monterrey or the Itesm (Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey) system.
I found this to be fitting for our reading this week.... The display of Safe Zone or Ally Network triangles in offices of heterosexuals demonstrates a supportive environment. However, the connection a student identifying as LGBTQ can make to LGBTQ faculty or staff as mentors plays an instrumental role in their identity development.
The slow economic downturn combined with the increase in enrollments and high expectations of benefits of a degree has resulted in the growth of career centers at universities in China. Professional staff and student counselors provide services typical of US campus career centers such as job fairs, resume critiques, and workshops.
"Employment counseling is a new phenomenon in China, emerging in the wake
of market reforms. Until the late 1990s, university graduates were
allocated jobs by the government. Suddenly a whole generation of
youngsters had to fend for themselves, without the benefit of insight
from parents or professors. A 150-percent increase in the
college-educated population in the last decade compounded their
challenges and piled on the pressure."
Our Career Services at the School of Labor and Employment Relations has a placement rate of 90% + for internship and full time placement of domestic HR professionals. The international students often struggle to land jobs in the US. Although they have to mark on their Visa that they fully intend to come back to China to work upon graduation, many wish to seek employment in the US. The growth of such guidance centers is promising for those returning back to China. Hopefully their undergraduate institutions will be able to extend the services to them for assistance in finding employment.
The Chronicle of Higher Education has a few good articles today in the Global news. First is a mentoring program that has increased retention rates from 82 to 87 percent at Curtin University in Australia. Mentoring takes place during the first year of their three-year degree programs. Mentors are selected by administrators who have succeeded academically. They are trained for their duties and serve about 15 mentees. Their service is noted on their academic records and they are awarded $100-$250 vouchers for participating. Link here.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Crazy story about a 17year old African American boy walking down the street in a gated community and gets shots by the neighborhood watch because he looks "suspicious".
Very interesting report that I found today, similar a recent conversation we had in class. There is apparently an increase in the percentage of African Americans taking AP tests, however only less than five percent are passing..any thoughts??
Here is the text from the article and linK:
"Nationwide, African Americans made up 14.7 percent of the 2011 high school graduating class. That year, Black students took 197,163 Advancement Placement examinations, or 7.2 percent of all AP tests. Yet, Blacks made up only 4.1 percent of the students who passed an AP examination.
AP tests are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Scores of 3, 4, or 5 are considered passing grades. The average score for Black students on AP tests in 2011 was 1.89. For whites, the mean score on AP tests was 2.97. The racial gap in AP test scores has widened in recent years as the number of African Americans who are taking these tests has expanded."
A former student at Bethune-CookmanCollege was raped during her freshman year by four former basketball players that attended the college. The former student filed a lawsuit against the men, and they were accused of gang raping the student. The plaintiff was gang raped in a vehicle owned by C.J. Reed. She stated that Reed mounded her with alcohol beverages. After taking a few sips, she began to feel faint. Reed then picked up three other basketball players that night, and they decided to perform sexual acts with her without her consent. Many accused the school of not preventing the distribution of alcohol to minors on campus and not having enough campus security.
Any thoughts, comments, and/or concerns?
Do you think that the university should be held responsible for not being able to prevent this situation from occurring on campus?
Would more campus security have prevented this situation from occurring?
Is it the schools fault for C.J. Reed to have alcohol in his possession while underage?
Should Reed’s father have been fired from his position due to allegations that his son might have raped the former student?
By Miriam Jordan | The Wall Street Journal – 18 hours ago
A group of Silicon Valley technology leaders, impatient with attempts to rewrite immigration laws, is funding efforts to help undocumented youths attend college, find jobs and stay in the country despite their illegal status.
The group includes Jeff Hawkins, inventor of the Palm Pilot; and the family foundations of Andrew Grove, co-founder of Intel Corp.; and Mark Leslie, founder of the former Veritas Software Corp. Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs, has for years supported undocumented students through her organizations that help low-income high-school students.
The Silicon Valley money is part of a broader response by individuals and states to Congress, which hasn't passed the Dream Act. That federal legislation would offer a path to legalization for illegal immigrants who graduate from a U.S. high school and attend college or join the military.
"We think Congress's inaction…is devastating for these students and tragic for the country," said Ms. Powell Jobs, who was one of the first in the tech community to champion the Dream Act.
The focus of the Silicon Valley philanthropists is Educators for Fair Consideration, or E4FC, a nonprofit that gives scholarships, career advice and legal services to students brought to the U.S. illegally as children.
Companies that knowingly hire illegal immigrants can face civil and criminal penalties. Among other ideas, the Silicon Valley donors are studying the possibility of using unpaid internships as way for students to come to the attention of employers who might later sponsor them for a legal work visa.
After helping a few dozen students through college with small donations, the San Francisco-based organization expanded with money from the tech leaders. It now has enlisted immigration attorneys to offer legal advice to hundreds of undocumented students.
"We used to think, 'Let's just get them through college'" with scholarships, said Katharine Gin, a teacher who founded E4FC along with a college counselor. "We thought the federal Dream Act would pass and we would be helping these students in the interim period only."
Several of the Silicon Valley supporters became aware of the issue close up: Mr. Hawkins got to know an undocumented student at his daughters' high school. Liz Simons, daughter of the founder of hedge fund Renaissance Technologies, mentored an undocumented honor student in high school who was struggling to raise funds for college because of his illegal status. Seth Leslie, son of Veritas's founder, had encountered undocumented students in his work as a schoolteacher and principal.
The money involved is relatively small: The tech philanthropists and others gave hundreds of thousands dollars in the last year to the group, whose 2012 operating budget is $600,000.
"I have chosen to make this one of my philanthropic areas," said Mr. Hawkins, who disclosed his giving for the first time in an interview but declined to state the amount. "It's still at an embryonic stage; I'm willing to crank it up as we find solutions."
California, Illinois and New York in recent months passed bills that enable undocumented students to receive financial aid for college. Thirteen states allow illegal immigrants who reside in their borders to pay in-state fees at public universities.
Despite bipartisan support in the past, the Dream Act never passed Congress after it became caught up in the broader debate over reshaping the nation's immigration system, including what to do with the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally. The latest version of the Dream Act was passed by the House in December 2010 but failed in the Senate.
To opponents, the bill is tantamount to an amnesty program for children whose parents broke U.S. immigration laws; they argue it would entice more people to sneak into the country. President Barack Obama supports the Dream Act; Republican Mitt Romney has said he would veto the measure if elected president.
On hearing of the efforts by the group, Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a national group that lobbies against legalization, said: "You'd think they would help people in the country legally who face difficult times getting a start."
About 65,000 undocumented students graduate from U.S. high schools each year, according to experts who follow the issue. The Supreme Court has ruled it unconstitutional to deny a K-12 public education to children who are in the country illegally.
But after that, their future is uncertain because they can't qualify for federal grants, work-study programs or bank loans to finance college nor can they obtain work legally.
U.S. tech companies have long backed raising the number of visas the government issues for skilled immigrants such as software engineers, and argue the country is losing its competitive edge as other economies attract skilled labor forces.
At a recent gathering in Los Altos, Calif., an undocumented 23-year-old with a degree in civil engineering, which he obtained on a scholarship, told funders of E4FC that he had five job offers in the last two months, only to have them revoked because of his immigration status. He said he has been willing to work for no pay to accrue experience required for a professional engineering license. Even that has proved challenging.
The U.S. has "put a lot of money into [undocumented students] already," said Eva Grove, wife of Intel's co-founder, whose family foundation gave $1 million to immigration-related groups last year. "It makes no sense to dead-end them after they are educated."
There has been an long standing debate regarding the use of standardized test and their ability to predict post-secondary education performance. This article examines the use of standardized testing and urges faculty and administration to consider "test-optional" admissions. The author states, "family income, gender, and race predict test scores more powerfully than test scores predict college grades." Many faculty and administration worry that changing to a "test-optional" policy will lower admission standards. However, the article cites research demonstrating that it actually raises standards:
"Wake Forest University went test-optional three years ago, and since then we’ve seen first-year students from the top 10 percent of their high school class jump from 65 percent in 2008 to 83 percent this year. Pell Grant recipients have doubled. Our student body is more racially and socioeconomically diverse than ever before. Library usage is up, and classroom discussions are reportedly livelier than before." What are others thoughts on the use of standardized testing? Are they discriminatory or useful? How can colleges and universities that do not make the change to 'test optional' use standardized tests in a more equitable manner?
I know that this article was published a few years ago, but I was never aware of this incident, and I wanted to share this article with you guys.
Colton Tooley, a student at the University of Texas in Austin campus, brought an AK-47 assault riffle to school. Colton shot his riffle several times before committing suicide on the sixth floor of the Perry-Castaneda Library. This event sparked a deabte about whether guns should be permitted on campus or not. Currently, the Texas law allows for students over the age of 21 to have a gun on campus.
How do you feel about a campus prohibiting guns on campus? If college is supposed to be a safe zone, then what is the point of allowing students to carry weapons on campus?
Well, Arizona has done it again. This time they have passed a bill that requires all students with the exception of athletes to pay at least $2,000 in tuition. Even if they are awarded scholarships or financial aid, they will be required to pay this amount. Athletes are exempt (I guess this is to be considered as payment for bringing in money to the school).
As we discussed today and in previous classes, low-income students are being left out of higher ed institutions. I suppose republicans see this as a part of life too.
Here is the link: http://campusprogress.org/articles/after_lawmakers_vote_to_increase_tuition_one_tells_student_welcome_to_/
In response to a call for changes to curriculum in teacher education programs, the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) announced the formation of a national commission aimed at developing stricter accrediting standards. The commission is made of 30 members (mainly school of education deans, superintendents, & union representatives) and is expected to present its recommendations in anywhere from 12-15 months.
I understand the focus being placed on improving the quality of teacher's and teacher education programs; however, what can be done to encourage student and parent involvement in the academic process?
As we continue our discussion on college enrollment and the effects of the earlier school years on enrollment, it would be great to see what you all think about parents enrolling their child in another school district that has greater resources than the school the child is zoned for.
A Bridgeport, Connecticut woman has pleaded guilty for sending her son to a Norwalk school. She is accused of stealing her son's education and has been ordered to pay back some of the money that the district say it took to teach her child.
Rather than ask the question of how to better struggling schools so that children in low-resource schools are not left behind, officials would rather arrest the individual. However, this is not an individual problem.
The story can be found here: http://www.wfsb.com/story/16988714/tonya-mcdowell-to-plead-guilty
Although Study Abroad is encouraged as part of the college experience, it is often seen as unaffordable by many. Numbers of those who go on the trips has tripled, but colleges need to find creative ways to target racial and ethnic minorities, men, working adults, lower-income and first-generation college students—all are underrepresented abroad.
As tuition increases will colleges be able to bridge the gap?
The first sentence of this article triggered my interest, “tuition is often a deciding factor in whether students attend” (Quinn, 1). With this idea, Barack Obama is attempting to lower tuition rates in order to allow access to low-income students. President Obama has a plan to “increase federal funding in the Perkins loan program from $1 billion to $8 billion, with distribution based on how well schools could lower tuition, serve low-income students and provide students with the most bang for their buck” (2). Also, Obama will cut a check of $1 billion dollars to states that frequently check the cost of higher education. Many young voters feel that this is a good idea, but others feel that this may not get approved due to our current debt.
A
longstanding tradition in American higher education -- that
undergraduates are charged the same tuition, regardless of major -- is
eroding, especially at doctoral universities.
That is the finding of a new survey
by the Cornell Higher Education Research Institute. Researchers checked
the websites of every public institution that awards bachelor's
degrees, and then surveyed some of the institutions identified as having
differential rates. A total of 143 public colleges or universities were
found to now have differential tuition policies. That figure includes
29 percent of bachelor's institutions, 11 percent of master's
institutions, and 41 percent of doctoral institutions.
When further analyzing the doctoral institutions, the institute found
that a slight majority of flagship universities now have differential
rates.
Up until 1980, differential tuition rates within an institution were
largely unheard-of, although some colleges did charge laboratory fees
associated with certain courses. As state appropriations failed to keep
up with growing enrollments and higher education expenses, many public
institutions started to charge more for certain programs, arguing either
that they cost more to offer, that student demand was greater or that
students in these fields were on a track to better-paying jobs than were
those studying other fields. But the policies have sometimes been controversial,
as some educators have argued that students should be encouraged to
pick fields based on their academic interests, not the price tag.
Other findings of the new survey include the following:
At doctoral and master's institutions, differential tuition is
generally based on a student's field of study, but at bachelor's
institutions, differential tuition is equally likely to be based on how
far along students are in their programs (with juniors and seniors
charged more than others, for example).
The most common majors facing extra charges are business, engineering and nursing.
Since public colleges and universities started to adopt variable
tuition policies, the number doing so has gone up steadily, with no
years from 1980 on showing a decline in the number of institutions with
variable tuition.
The Cornell Institute's report does not take a stand on whether
differential tuition is a sound policy. But it questions whether so many
institutions should be embracing a policy about which relatively little
is known (except that it seems to generate revenue).
"The process by which differential tuition policies have arisen and
been have spread across American public higher education institutions
has not been examined," the report says. "Neither has there been any
research on the possible consequences of differential tuition policies.
For example, does differential tuition by major influence students’
choice of majors? Do higher tuition levels for upper-level students
affect students’ persistence and graduation rates? If such effects
exist, are they larger for students from lower-income families and how
do such effects interact with state and institutional financial aid
policies?"
As a product of a community college system, I worry about the direction of community colleges on a national scale. Community Colleges are predominantly populated by students that traditionally come from underrepresented background and are most likely the most underrepresented in higher education. Contrast to a previous article pertaining to revamping the California Community College system in order to ensure students are transferring, this article otherwise suggest Community Colleges are institutions that will solely focus on educating the workforce.
This article sheds light on a topic I strongly believe is understudied, the diminishing of a 2-year transfer institution. The article stated "the administration prominently called on community colleges and businesses to collaborate more during the White House Summit on Community Colleges back in 2010. Its newest proposal is the Community College to Career Fund, which would provide $8-billion to two-year colleges and states to work with companies to train an estimated two million workers in high-growth industries" Rather than focus on how to help students transfer into four-year institutions, the goal is to funnel them into the workforce by utilizing collaborative efforts between community colleges and businesses to meet the workforce needs.
I understand there is a need to decrease or eliminate the unemployment rate, however I do not think the focus should be entirely on producing the workforce. Students should still have the opportunity to learn about transferring to four-year institutions and holding more than a 2-year degree or technical certificate. With little focus on helping students transfer, I am afraid the perception of teachers, counselors and administrators will also follow suit. Meaning counselors would probably be more inclined to tell students about technical programs rather than bachelor degree programs. IF this is the case, what does this mean for the student population in community colleges that are predominantly low-income, underrepresented students? More importantly, what does this mean for curriculum offered at community college? Will transfer courses slowly but surely leave the picture?
I am starting to believe it is almost imperative to tell students to attend a four-year institution rather than attend a community college first. It is only those that have the social capital to understand and know of additional educational opportunities that could have a chance to do more than a 2-year degree. It will be interesting to see how things play out overtime. Businesses have very much entered in k-12 with the support of the Obama administration. It only seems the trend will continue to community colleges as well. Thus I am hesitant with Obama Push for Community Colleges to Partner with Businesses in this day and age.
Noble Street College Prep fines students for "misbehavior." Misbehavior is in quotation marks because fines can be a result of untied shoelaces, etc. Although this school prides itself on graduating students and sending them to college they are going about it the wrong way. In a sense, this is an example of a weed out process as low-income families may not be able to afford the continuous fines. In fact, the superintendent of the school says that the policy teaches students to follow rules and produce in a structured environment. Such a statement is problematic in so many ways. It follows a deficit model with its emphasis on behavior, suggesting that poor, minority students lack discipline.
Rahm Emanuel, the mayor of Chicago, is in favor of the policy, saying that it gets good results and that parents do not have to send their children to the school.
This article discusses a Title IX suite filed by three femal wrestlers at the University of California. The lawsuite claimed that the institution discriminated against women at the instution by failing to provide sufficient athletic opportunities for females. The University paid $1.35 million to settle the lawsuit.
This article I am posting is perfect for our discussion of diversity in education and higher education. According to article posted by Scott Jaschik, "The U.S. Supreme Court today agreed to consider whether the University of Texas at Austin has the right to consider race and ethnicity in admissions decisions. Those bringing the case hope the Supreme Court will restrict or even eliminate the right of colleges to consider race in admissions – a prerogative last affirmed by the Supreme Court in 2003 in a case involving the University of Michigan’s law school."
Essentially if the U.S. Supreme Court rules that race should no longer be considered a factor in admissions, it will over-turn the Supreme Court decision in 2003 (GRUTTER v. BOLLINGER) which ruled, "The Law School’s narrowly tailored use of race in admissions decisions to further a compelling interest in obtaining the educational benefits that flow from a diverse student body is not prohibited by the Equal Protection Clause, Title VI, or §1981. Pp. 9—32."
If you have taken Dr. Trent's Access to Higher Education course, you may recall we read a book called: Integrating the 40 Acres: The 50-Year Struggle for Racial Equality at the University of Texas written by Dwonna Goldstone. This book is a documentary of the race relations at the University of Texas Austin, specifically examining the experiences of African American students. Without extreme measures taken to integrate students in the UT campus, there would be no underrepresented minority students. Thus to challenge affirmative action is simply to challenge diversity in higher education.
This is my personal opinion of the use of affirmative action. Hopefully I can sum up my perspective in a short, concise, and articulated manner. In America, policy utilizing race have been used in two ways: 1) to discriminate and eliminate particular groups, particularly African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans and low-income students from accessing resources that will enable them to have the opportunity to increase their social mobility in America, and 2) to create instances of educational opportunities that were originally denied to them due to the way race was used in reason number 1.
It appears to me that we are in a state where individuals in society want to neglect the impact that race, racism, and discrimination has had on certain groups in America. Simply stating race is no longer a problem is equivalent to saying, the sky does not exist when it is apparent that it does. Using race is a Catch 22. It is wrong of course to discriminate against race, however creating opportunities, specifically for students that were never given the chance in America is right. I am sure this conversation fits into the larger discussion of Critical Race Theory and Interest Convergence. Its bad enough my own state, California does not honor affirmative action, I will be heart broken if this continues which essentially jeopardize our want and need for diversity in higher education.
This article alludes to changes that need to be made in the California higher ed system. In it, the author says that most minority students go to community colleges; however, a small percentage of the students are actually transitioning into the other institutions within the CAL system. So, although the pipeline idea sounds good, more work needs to be done to ensure that minority students are also benefiting from this system.
Here is the link: http://diverseeducation.com/article/16834c1/civil-rights-project-california-maintains-segregated-community-college-system.html
Albany State University awards 32 Black former students honorary degrees, in an attempt to make ammends for it's injustice to them over 40 years ago. While the gesture is foot in the right direction. The damage has already been done in my opinion..What do you think?
A drum major in the Marching 100 band at FAMU was beaten to death in a hazing incident. The university has strict rules and regulations against hazing, be it not tolerable in Fraternities, Sororities, and/or any other organizations on campus. The family of the student filed a lawsuit against the university “claming school officials did nothing to stop a ‘culture of hazing’ within the famed ‘Marching 100.’”
Any thoughts, feelings, and/or comments?
Some questions to think about:
How do you feel about hazing in general?
Do you think that the president of the Marching 100 is partially responsible for the student’s death? If so, why?
Here is the link to the article: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/12/17/autopsy-shows-florida-am-drum-major-was-beaten-to-death-in-hazing-incident/
Vote now for your favorite HBCU to receive a valuable campus improvement grant
It’s your turn to make your voice heard in helping select this year’s RETOOL YOUR SCHOOL campus improvement grant recipients.
You know how valuable our nation’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities are, and how much they have contributed to our country’s growth in so many ways. What could be more worthwhile than being part of helping preserve and improve some of America’s most historic campuses and landmarks?
This year, we’ve expanded the program. We are introducing a new $25,000 Campus Pride Grant for the school that shows the most initiative in promoting their proposals and garnering votes. We are also providing an additional $10,000 Tier II Grant. In all, we’ve increased the total grant funds available to $185,000.
Last year, we awarded grants totaling $150,000 to HBCUs. A $50,000 Tier I Grant went to Bethune-Cookman University to help upgrade their Student Center with wheelchair ramps and barrier-free automatic access doors in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Ten additional schools received $10,000 each for a variety of projects, from landscaping to lighting to irrigation.
This article discusses the new teacher effectiveness measurement in Tennessee. An eighth grade teacher at a school in Memphis was surprised when the assistant principal dropped by to watch her teach as part of this new evaluation system. During class time, the lesson didn’t go as planned and many students stumped on review questions. After the class, the assistant principal rated her with 1s and 2s on a 5 point scale. He provides his reasoning’s, which to her seems unfair. After Reading, do you agree with the ratings that the assistant principal gave the teacher? Do you think that this new evaluation system is effective?
Here is a new report from the Center for the Study of Race & Equity in Education at the University of Pennsylvania. The author of the report is Dr. Shaun Harper.
In the article the authors discuss the association between child poverty and achievement. The authors go on to make several recommendations for putting low-income schools on an even playing field with middle-income schools.
If low-income schools remain behind other, more advantaged schools, then many of these students will continue to lag behind their peers, which have huge implications for enrollment in college.
I think everyone knows by now that I am from North Carolina, specifically Greensboro. February 1 is always a special day for us from the "336." On this day in 1960, four freshmen from a local college, North Carolina A&T State University, made a bold and courageous decision to challenge Jim Crow laws by staging a sit-in at Woolworth's lunch counter.
As the NPR report states, "On that first day, February 1, the four men stayed at the lunch counter until closing. The next day, they came back with 15 other students. By the third day, 300 joined in; later, 1,000."
Here is a link to the story on NPR's "All things considered" on February 1, 2008...