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Cover image of Getting to Graduation
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Getting to Graduation

The Completion Agenda in Higher Education

edited by Andrew P. Kelly and Mark Schneider

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What will it take to achieve President Obama’s higher education completion agenda?

The United States, long considered to have the best higher education in the world, now ranks eleventh in the proportion of 25- to 34-year-olds with a college degree. As other countries have made dramatic gains in degree attainment, the U.S. has improved more slowly. In response, President Obama recently laid out a national "completion agenda" with the goal of making the U.S. the best-educated nation in the world by the year 2020. Getting to Graduation explores the reforms that we must pursue to recover a position...

What will it take to achieve President Obama’s higher education completion agenda?

The United States, long considered to have the best higher education in the world, now ranks eleventh in the proportion of 25- to 34-year-olds with a college degree. As other countries have made dramatic gains in degree attainment, the U.S. has improved more slowly. In response, President Obama recently laid out a national "completion agenda" with the goal of making the U.S. the best-educated nation in the world by the year 2020. Getting to Graduation explores the reforms that we must pursue to recover a position of international leadership in higher education as well as the obstacles to those reforms.

This new completion agenda puts increased pressure on institutions to promote student success and improve institutional productivity in a time of declining public revenue. In this volume, scholars of higher education and public policymakers describe promising directions for reform. They argue that it is essential to redefine postsecondary education and to consider a broader range of learning opportunities—beyond the research university and traditional bachelor degree programs—to include community colleges, occupational certificate programs, and apprenticeships. The authors also emphasize the need to rethink policies governing financial aid, remediation, and institutional funding to promote degree completion.

Reviews

Reviews

Getting to Graduation is a must for educational studies collections or public policy discussion, enthusiastically recommended.

A volume replete with nuanced perspectives on the opportunities and challenges higher education faces in the U.S... The book does an excellent job of covering a number of critical issues that bear on policies at the institutional, state, and federal levels.

The book provides a useful synthesis of policy, practice and perhaps, most importantly, standards for rigorous research to assess the viability and prospective mechanisms for achieving ambitious policy goals.

A solid body of work on an important topic that is not getting the kind of analytical attention it deserves.

About

Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
344
ISBN
9781421406220
Illustration Description
8 line drawings
Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Challenges
Chapter 1. Increasing Higher Education Attainment in the United States: Challenges and Opportunities
Chapter 2. Graduation Rates at America's Universities: What

Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Challenges
Chapter 1. Increasing Higher Education Attainment in the United States: Challenges and Opportunities
Chapter 2. Graduation Rates at America's Universities: What We Know and What We Need to Know
Part II: The Performance and Potential of Sub-Baccalaureate Programs
Chapter 3. Can Community Colleges Achieve Ambitious Graduation Goals?
Chapter 4. Certificate Pathways to Postsecondary Success and Good Jobs
Chapter 5. Apprenticeships as an Alternative Route to Skills and Credentials
Part III: The Relationship between Policy and Completion
Chapter 6. Financial Aid: A Blunt Instrument for Increasing Degree Attainment
Chapter 7. Remediation: The Challenges of Helping Underprepared Students
Chapter 8. Equalizing Credits and Rewarding Skills: Credit Portability and Bachelor's Degree Attainment
Part IV: The Lessons from Three States
Chapter 9. The Challenge of Scaling Successful Policy Innovations: A Case Study of Three Colorado Community College System Grants
Chapter 10. Efforts to Improve Productivity: The Impact of Higher Education Reform in Texas
Chapter 11. The Ohio Experience with Outcomes-Based Funding
Conclusion
List of Contributors
Index

Author Bios
Featured Contributor

Andrew P. Kelly

Andrew P. Kelly is a research fellow in education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy.