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Community colleges need funds, study says

New focus urged on lifting school graduation rates

As elite universities debate with Congress over how much of their multibillion-dollar endowments to spend, a new report argues that higher education's heavy-lifters, community colleges, need both more money and better results.

The report, commissioned by the nonprofit College Board, aims to bring some of the spotlight back to the nation's 1,200 community colleges and their 11.6 million students.

While the document predictably calls for more public funds, it also reflects a changing outlook among community college leaders: It's no longer enough just to enroll students. Community colleges must do more to measure students' progress and make sure they earn the credits they need to transfer or complete a degree.

The report is from The National Commission on Community Colleges, a group created by the College Board, and was written largely by community college leaders. It's being distributed at College Board meetings starting this week, and highlights the important role community colleges play in expanding access to higher education and driving economic growth.

But the report also acknowledges that the schools' traditional emphasis on enrolling as many students as possible will not cut it any more.

"The focus has been access," said Augustine Gallego, chancellor emeritus of the San Diego Community College District and chairman of the commission. "Now, we need to commit a lot of time and resources to how do we make sure students succeed, and how do we measure that success."

Community colleges currently enroll 6.6 million for-credit students and another 5 million who aren't seeking credit. The institutions certify 80 percent of first-responders (such as firefighters and EMTs) and account for half of new nurses.

With costs that have gone up more slowly than at four-year institutions, community colleges are an increasingly popular starting point for a bachelor's degree. The College Board's latest survey on college prices found the average net cost - accounting for financial aid - for community college students is $320 per year.

But the colleges haven't done as well moving students toward their goals. Many of their students aren't there to earn a degree or certificate, so a "graduation rate" isn't a fair measurement. But several recent studies have focused on those who do want to earn a credential, and found that disturbing numbers of students never make it. One study of California's giant community college system estimated only about a quarter of students seeking a degree or to transfer to a four-year school succeed within six years.

James Jacobs, of the Community College Research Center at Teachers College, Columbia University, says better student outcomes have risen to the top of the agenda for a broad range of community colleges. A major philanthropic project called "Achieving the Dream" is helping community colleges study their students' performance and develop ways to improve it. At least one state, Washington, is changing how it funds community colleges to reward student progress instead of just enrollment, Jacobs said. 

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