Best Colleges Will Have The Best Completion Rates: National Commission Letter Huffington Post The 32-page letter said colleges need to reform campus culture, cost-effectiveness and quality and their use of data ......."
Share ideas that matter on the social web and experience
the benefits of curating the world's best content.
I don't have a Facebook, a Twitter or a LinkedIn account
Your new post is loading...
Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
Kamakshi Rajagopal's comment,
April 12, 1:18 PM
Hi Kathy, we are conducting an experiment on Scoop.IT pages on education at the Open Universiteit (NL). Would you like to participate? Sign up here: http://bit.ly/14QR9oa
Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
|
jillyfrees's curator insight,
May 6, 3:15 AM
This ia a neat checklist to assess whether the project you set is worth the effort. Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
Gust MEES's curator insight,
February 16, 1:02 PM
3. Educational institutions around the world are not keeping up with teaching styles and general skill needs of the 21st century workforce. This is a very complex problem to fix, but at least the issues are on the table. Educationproviders and leaders have to visit corporate recruiters and learn about the needs of business.
Allan Shaw's curator insight,
February 17, 12:38 AM
Perhaps our time, the here and now is redolent of times gone past where education had to face significant public criticism and attempt significant adjustments. The early 20th sentury in the USA was such a time. Educators need to lead from a firm values base and in line with what is best for students. Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
|
"...Colleges need to focus on sending their students away with degrees instead of spending so much time recruiting and boosting enrollment numbers, argues an open letter released this week from the National Commission on Higher Education Attainment.
The 32-page letter said colleges need to reform campus culture, cost-effectiveness and quality and their use of data so more of their students receive diplomas and fewer at-risk students walk away with debt instead of opportunity.
"We spend a great deal of time thumping the drum of 'Come to our place,'" E. Gordon Gee, chair of the commission and president of The Ohio State University, told The Huffington Post. Soon, he said, "The completion dean is going to be as important as the admissions dean, and even more so."
The open letter was released just as a new report concluded that 46 percent of America's college students don't graduate college within six years, calling the phenomenon “a dropout crisis” in American colleges and universities.
According to the commission's letter, colleges should better recognize nontraditional students like adult learners and students who are the first in their families to attend universities.
"Who we have in college is different," Gayle Miller, president of LaGuardia Community College, told HuffPost, "and we have to really rethink our systems and structures."