CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SPEEDING CSU GRADUATIONS MUST NOT DUMB DOWN DEGREES”
The
23-campus California State University system knows it must somehow speed up
graduation beyond today’s pace, which sees just 19 percent of entering freshmen
graduate within four years. The low rate is at least partly because more than a
third of frosh need some remedial work.
Increased
college graduation is especially crucial in three major regions: the Los
Angeles area, the Central Valley and the Inland Empire of Riverside and San
Bernardino counties, where need for educated workers is growing steadily as
industries become more technically complex.
A study
from the non-profit Public Policy Institute of California the other day found
the state will need 1.1 million more college educated workers by 2030 (beyond
its current pace of producing graduates) to keep up with economic demand.
That’s
one big reason the Cal State system this summer floated the idea of turning its
current crop of remedial math and English classes into for-credit classes
rather than leaving them as non-credit courses that don’t contribute to
anyone’s graduation.
The
problem with giving academic credit for remedial classes that essentially
provide students with knowledge or skills they should have picked up in high
school is that it threatens to dumb down degrees from Cal State campuses from
the North Coast to San Diego.
Top
officials in the Cal State system’s Long Beach headquarters know this and want
to nip in the bud any suspicion about inferior diplomas.
“We
will only do this if we can do it without dumbing down the degree,” said Mike
Uhlenkamp, senior spokesman for Cal State. “The most important thing we do is
make sure students get a high quality education so employers know just what
they’re getting when they take our people on.”
That’s
where things get dicey. How can Cal State combine standard freshman coursework
with remedial lessons in the same kind of classwork, the stated goal of the
putative new for-credit policy?
“We
have to do it,” Uhlenkamp said. “Classes won’t be the same as today’s when
we’re trying to do catch-up and coursework all in the same breath.”
Cal
State would like to get this going, at least on a pilot basis, by next fall,
which means students starting classes right about now won’t notice much change.
But it’s a conundrum the nation’s largest university system hasn’t quite
figured out.
“We’re
consulting faculty, campus administrations, the community colleges and everyone
else we can think of with an interest in this,” Uhlenkamp added. “We’re still
evaluating the best way to do it.”
Still,
it may not be possible to turn a cow into a racehorse just by calling it
something different or painting it a different color.
And
yet, there’s little doubt the present system has made many students feel
one-down. Some feel discriminated against because the non-credit remedial
classes they’ve been required to take doom them to spending a year or more
longer getting to graduation than many of their onetime high school classmates.
So
the Cal State bosses will consider criteria other than routine placement tests
to determine who must get remedial work. “In the past, we’ve relied on that,”
said Uhlenkamp. “But some people are just poor test takers even if they know a
subject.” The remedy will be a more
holistic approach, using high school grades and scores on the SAT and ACT tests
(taken by most college-bound high schoolers) in addition to placement tests as
factors indicating whether students are ready for college when they arrive.
And
it’s not just Cal State that faces the remediation problem. So do the state’s
community colleges, where many students who ordinarily would require catch-up
classes now are being mainstreamed, some doing well.
The
bottom line: For the community colleges, Cal State and most of California, it’s
a must to graduate students faster, but the trick will be to do this in a way
that doesn’t decrease the quality and value of diplomas they get in the final
act of their undergraduate years.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski
Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign
to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more
Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
.
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