(NAME-MCE) Obama on Higher Ed

Anselmo Villanueva anselmo.villanueva at gmail.com
Wed Nov 5 10:11:07 EST 2008


Obama on Higher Ed

President-elect Obama has called for reform of loan programs, a tuition tax
credit in exchange for service, new investments in research, and a broader
concept of affirmative action.



Complete story below.  For related stories, go to:

November 5, 2008

Obama on Higher Ed

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/11/05/obama

Many higher education leaders had hoped to see college issues, or education
generally, emerge as a major issue in the 2008 race. That never quite
happened. And with the war in Iraq and the collapse of the economy, that may
not be surprising. But over the course of two years leading up to his
election, Sen. Barack Obama has given many policy addresses and issued many
proposals about education that may guide his work in office — at least after
he deals with the economy, Iraq and Afghanistan. Here are some of the
highlights:

Loan programs: Obama responded to a scandal last spring about student loan
programs by proposing a series of reforms. In a May 2007 proposal, he called
for eliminating subsidies to lenders and pushing all borrowing into the
direct lending program. He said that eliminating subsidies would allow for a
significant boost in support for Pell Grants. At around the same time Obama
made his proposal, similar ideas were unveiled by Hillary Clinton and John
Edwards, who were at that time emerging as top competitors in the race for
the Democratic nomination. In part because all of the leading candidates
were more sympathetic to direct lending than to the guaranteed loan program,
and the Republicans at the time were largely ignoring higher education
issues, there was little sustained debate about these proposals.

Access to higher education: While Obama started with a focus on loan
programs, he went on to issue more detailed proposals on college access,
saying repeatedly that he worried about the challenges families faced paying
for college. Included in his college access plans:

   * A fully refundable tax credit to cover the first $4,000 in college
costs — enough for two years of community college tuition in most cases —
for everyone. The only requirement would be 100 hours of public service a
year; this could be performed in the summer or between semesters.
   * Simplification of federal aid applications. (There has been some
progress on this issue, which attracts bipartisan support, since Obama spoke
on it and prior to the election.)
   * A pledge to keep Pell Grant maximums rising at the level of inflation
or higher if possible.

Community colleges: Obama has proposed a new grant program that would
provide funds to community colleges to conduct more thorough analysis of the
types of skills and technical education that are in high demand from
students and local businesses; to create new associate of arts degree
programs that cater to emerging careers; and to reward institutions that
graduate more students and also increase their numbers of transfer students
to four-year institutions.

Science and technology: During the campaign, the president-elect repeatedly
linked investments in science and technology to improvements in the economy,
and he made a number of specific proposals. Obama has called for expanded
financing of federal research programs, with special efforts for those
academic scientists starting their careers; the creation of new programs to
improve math and science education and to attract more students to them —
with special efforts to recruit minority and female students to fields where
they have been underrepresented; and special efforts to promote research and
education related to climate change and health care. Obama has backed stem
cell research and opposed Bush administration limits on such funds. Further,
he has pledged to "restore the basic principle that government decisions
should be based on the best-available, scientifically valid evidence and not
on the ideological predispositions of agency officials or political
appointees." A more philosophical outline of Obama's views on the link
between education, science and economic competitiveness may be found in his
speech in June at Kettering University.

Affirmative action: Obama has repeatedly said that affirmative action should
not be eliminated, but he has suggested a combination of class and race as
factors. In a 2007 interview with ABC, asked if his daughters will deserve
affirmative action when they apply to college, he said that they "should
probably be treated by any admissions officer as folks who are pretty
advantaged." Further, in Obama's Philadelphia speech on race, he noted with
sympathy the frustrations of some while people "when they hear that an
African American is getting an advantage in landing a good job or a spot in
a good college because of an injustice that they themselves never
committed." But in that speech, as in others, Obama has also repeatedly
stressed that the economic and educational gaps between some minority
individuals and others are real and need attention.

While presidential candidates prepare policies on issues such as education
and research, they also end up speaking on other higher education issues
when they are asked surprise questions on the campaign trail or in debates,
or when they happen to be campaigning in an area that is focused on a
particular issue. In these situations, Obama has:

   * Called for colleges to lift bans on Reserve Officers Training Corps
programs. Obama opposes the military's discriminatory policies against gay
people — the source of much campus opposition to ROTC. But in an appearance
at Columbia University in September, he said that "the notion that young
people here at Columbia or anywhere, in any university, aren't offered the
choice, the option of participating in military service, I think is a
mistake."
   * Criticized the cost of college textbooks and professors who assign
their own books. In an appearance in Texas, he said: "Books are a big
scam.... I taught law at the University of Chicago for 10 years, and one of
the biggest scams is law professors write their own text books and then
assign it to their students. They make a mint. It's a huge racket."
   * Backed the right to attend community college for those without legal
status to be in the United States. Obama spoke on this issue in North
Carolina, where this has been the subject of much debate. In an interview,
he said: "For us to deny them access to community college, even though
they've never lived in Mexico, at least as far as they can tell ... is to
deny that this is how we've always built this country up."

— Scott Jaschik


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