| Americans
Confident in Higher Education but Continue to Worry about College
Cost, Quality of K-12 Education According
to “Quality, Affordability, and Access: Americans Speak
on Higher Education,” a recent study from the Educational
Testing Service, education remains a high priority for the
nation. Focus groups polled in May 2003 give good grades to
higher education but have grave concerns about K-12 education
and its ability to prepare students to succeed in college.
The majority of Americans also have little knowledge about
education reform efforts at the elementary and high school
levels. Although Americans are happy with the quality of higher
education, they have concerns about access, cost, and college
readiness. Americans favor involvement by the federal government
in addressing these issues.
FINDINGS
What the Public Thinks
about Higher Education and K-12 Quality
- The majority of business leaders
(72 percent), college faculty (79 percent), college students
(56 percent), and adults (56 percent) give the American
higher education system an "A" or "B" for quality.
- K-12 education scored an "A"
or "B" from only 31 percent of adults; 45 percent of college
students; 33 percent of college faculty; and 44 percent
of business leaders.
- The majority of college students
(89 percent), college faculty (90 percent), and business
leaders (88 percent) feel the higher education system "works
well."
- A majority of adults (57 percent)
say that the national education system is doing very well
or well enough at graduating students from college who are
prepared to succeed in the work force. Business executives
who are in a position to hire recent graduates are more
optimistic, with 73 percent reporting that higher education
is doing a good job at preparing students for work.
- A majority of adults (57 percent)
say that the national education system is doing very well
or well enough at graduating students from college who are
prepared to succeed in the work force. Business executives
who are in a position to hire recent graduates are more
optimistic, with 73 percent reporting that higher education
is doing a good job at preparing students for work.
What the Public Is Worried About
- More than half of adults say
that our national education system is coming up short or
falling behind when it comes to offering young people from
all backgrounds a chance to go to a college or university.
- More than a year after it was
passed, only 37 percent of adults are aware that a major
K-12 education bill has been signed into law (the No Child
Left Behind Act), and only 12 percent believe that reforms
have led to changes in the schools.
- More than half of adults name
rising tuition and other costs as the biggest problem facing
colleges and universities. Additional concerns include decreased
funding from the government (20 percent) and the quality
of faculty/academic programs (16 percent).
What the Public Thinks about
Funding and Federal Involvement
- Eighty-four percent of adults
say that the federal government should pay a significant
role in higher education, 38 percent want to limit government's
role to helping students and their families afford college,
and 46 percent want government's role to include strengthening
higher education's accountability.
- The public is willing to pay
more taxes to increase federal support for college students
(66 percent) and for colleges and universities (61 percent).
Seventy-two percent support increasing tax credits for families
sending their children to college.
- Forty-five percent want the Higher
Education Act level of funding to remain the same, 37 percent
want funding to increase, and only 7 percent want less funding.
- Seventy-four percent of adults
favor placing federal limits on college tuition to keep
increases in line with inflation.
What the Public Thinks
about Accountability
- The public is split down the
middle on college and university accountability for the
quality of higher education: Forty-five percent say that
colleges and universities should be held more accountable
for the quality of higher education; 46 percent feel that
colleges and universities are already held accountable enough.
- The public thinks that it is
more important to hold colleges accountable for the quality
of education they provide (52 percent), rather than how
they spend their federal dollars (24 percent). Twenty-two
percent volunteer that they should be held accountable for
both.
For more information
about the report, visit the ETS Web site, www.ets.org/aboutets/americaspeaks/survey2003.html.
For a summary presentation
of the study's key findings, visit ftp://ftp.ets.org/pub/corp/2003surveypresentation.pdf.
(PDF)
Survey conducted by Peter
D. Hart Research Associates and Robert M. Teeter's Coldwater
Corporation.
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DID
YOU KNOW?
- The public does not see a major need
for reform in higher education.
- The public sees great “value”
for their money in college degrees.
- Americans are willing to pay more in
taxes to fund an increase in assistance to individuals to
help pay for college.
- Americans are concerned that high school
graduates are not equipped to pursue a college degree or
enter the workforce.
- Only three in eight adults are aware
that a national education reform bill was signed into law.
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