Excerpts from the following letter
appeared in the May 16, 2003 issue of The
Chonicle of Higher Education.
To the Editor,
The Career College Association's proposed plan for new accountability
standards represents a disturbingly narrow vision of college
outcomes for the 21st century ("Will Congress Require
Colleges to Grade Themselves?" April 4, 2003). They are
absolutely correct that prospective students, their parents,
and taxpayers deserve to be well informed about what colleges
and universities are offering to today's students and what
outcomes they are achieving. The criteria they propose to
measure these outcomes, however, fall far short of what is
really needed and divert attention away from the important
work of raising levels of achievement for all students.
The right point of departure for improving accountability
in higher education is not graduation rates nor is it employer
satisfaction surveys. Accountability across the entire K-16
system should begin with a shared focus on the knowledge,
skills, and responsibilities Americans will need for a world
of unprecedented complexity. Every college student, whatever
her chosen institution or major, deserves a solid liberal
education that prepares her for her intersecting roles as
citizens in a diverse and globally engaged democracy; contributors
to a dynamic economy; and makers of meaningful lives-and colleges
should, indeed, be held accountable for achieving this ambitious
goal.
Our organization, the Association of American Colleges and
Universities is sponsoring dialogues all across the country
about the outcomes of a college education for the 21st century
built on our recently released report, Greater Expectations:
A New Vision for Learning as a Nation Goes to College. Business
leaders, educators, students, parents, public officials and
civic leaders participating in these dialogues understand
that the outcomes of a college education extend far beyond
attainment of one's first job.
Our board chair, John Noonan, quoted in this article, also
makes the important point that different kinds of colleges
and universities will certainly have different missions and
varied approaches to providing this high quality learning
for students. The higher education community should and can
come together to establish a set of goals and broad frameworks
for college learning outcomes. Further, we should and can
work with the K-12 sector to bring about these outcomes for
all students seeking a college education. Developing a new
federal accounting requirement that requires schools to answer
the simplistic set of questions proposed by the Career College
Association will certainly not do the job of raising levels
of achievement for all students-surely the more important
goal to be pursuing at this time.
Sincerely,
Carol Geary Schneider
President
Association of American Colleges and Universities
|
 |
|