Online students apply for aid
Online college students will benefit from the new $61 billion higher education bill, writes Natasha Bright on Dot on i. Nearly 7 million adult students account for as much as 70 percent of college enrollment, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. More are enrolling in online college classes and applying for tuition assistance. [...]
Students take longer to earn degrees
Low-income students and those who start at community colleges or less-selective universities are taking much longer to earn a bachelor’s degree than they did 30 years ago, concludes a new study. Why? Researchers blame “declines in collegiate resources” and students working more hours to meet rising college costs, “crowding out time spent on academic pursuits.” [...]
Training doesn’t guarantee a job
A dozen laid=off workers signed up for a 28-week course to learn precision machining at Manchester Community College, reports the Hartford Courant. Federal funds paid the tuition. But many who completed the training are still looking for work. Kingsley Ghartey had lost his $15.30-an-hour job more than a year earlier when the plant where he [...]
CCs train nuclear techs
Homer Simpson’s job, nuclear power technician, is hot again, reports the New York Times. A two-year degree as a nuclear tech qualifies a young worker to start at more than $50,000 as an apprentice and work up to $80,000, reports the New York Times. (That’s how Homer can afford his doughnut habit.) Recognizing the looming [...]
Shift focus from access to success
It’s time to shift from a focus on college access to college success, writes Dr. Sara Goldrick-Rab on Education Optimists. Jill Biden, the vice-president’s wife and a community college English teacher, will lead a White House summit on community colleges this fall. Goldrick-Rab wants to get beyond talk of “best practices and successful models” to [...]
Innovation and its enemies
Community College Dean is pushing data-driven decision-making, but faces many obstacles to innovation: a personnel shortage, useless data, time pressures and the dead hand of past practices (enforced by union contracts). Reliance on data undercuts the power of people who are good at dominating group decisions. Dean recalls a department chairman who “argued passionately that [...]
Are you on track for college?
Are you on track for college? California’s community colleges want 11th graders to take the Early Assessment Program – EAP – exam developed by the California State University system. Most juniors who take the optional exam are told they’re not ready for college math and English, giving them an incentive to use senior year to [...]
‘Nice hat’ says ‘the compliment dude’
Life is a little brighter at Southwestern Illinois College thanks to 19-year-old Nick Bartosik, the “compliment dude.” Part of each day, he stands on the Belleville campus holding a “Free Compliments” sign and saying something nice to passers-by. “Nice hat,” he called out to one student. “Love your piercing,” to another. “Awesome bag,” to a [...]
Gates: $110 million for better remediation
The Gates Foundation will spend $110 million on better, faster remedial programs to boost community college completion rates, Melinda F. Gates said in the concluding speech at the American Association of Community Colleges’ meeting in Seattle. “You can educate your students according to new models that yield dramatically better results for a fraction of the [...]
In the spotlight
Welcome to Community College Spotlight, a new blog devoted to news, analysis and discussion about the most important and most neglected part of our higher education, the community colleges. The blog is part of The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit source of national education news published by the Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media, Teachers [...]


