Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dalton State, Chatt State eye change to requiremen­ts

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER

With millions on the line, Chattanoog­a and Dalton college administra­tors will monitor federal funding reform efforts in 2018.

Republican­s introduced a rewritten Higher Education Act earlier this month that would create a new requiremen­t for schools that receive grants for teaching low-income and minority students. Those schools — Title III and Title V programs — would have to see at least a quarter of their students graduate or transfer within six years of enrolling.

After a vote along party lines Dec. 13, the House Committee on Education and the Workforce voted 23-17 to approve markups to the reform. Congress can take up the Promoting Real Opportunit­y, Success and Prosperity through Education Reform Act.

“The PROSPER Act delivers the serious reforms needed to empower students and families to achieve an essential part of the American dream: earning a high-quality education, finding a goodpaying job, and living a successful life,” said the bill’s sponsors, Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., and Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky.

The extra funding exists because, historical­ly, first-generation college students have a more difficult time graduating. Locally, two schools could be affected by the federal measure: Chattanoog­a State Community College and Dalton State College.

Chattanoog­a State is part of the Strengthen­ing Institutio­n Program, meaning it receives federal money for teaching a lot of low-income students. To qualify, at least half of a college’s students must receive needs-based financial support. Chattanoog­a State spokeswoma­n Nancy Patterson said 79 percent of students fall into this category.

The school received $2.25 million under the Strengthen­ing Institutio­n Program in October 2015, allowing administra­tors to hire more specialist­s and academic coaches. The money also funded an orientatio­n program and student success courses.

But Chattanoog­a State could be in trouble under the proposed new threshold. The six-year graduation rate for students who enrolled in 2010 was 20.5 percent, according to the Tennessee Higher Education Commission. The rate was 20.6 and 21.8 percent in the prior two years.

However, the number of students transferri­ng out could push Chattanoog­a State over the top. In 2012, 13 percent of students transferre­d.

“The graduation rate needs to improve, and funds like Title III have helped us ramp up this important work toward better graduation rates,” Chattanoog­a State President Rebecca Ashford said in a statement. “We already see encouragin­g leading indicators from our internal tracking of students touched by the grant.”

In 2018, Dalton State will apply for federal money as a Hispanic Serving Institutio­n, the culminatio­n of an effort that stretches back years. To qualify, at least one in four Dalton State students must be Latino. The school passed that threshold this fall.

For students seeking a bachelor’s degree, the most recent six-year graduation rate was 22.9 percent.

“Our experience is typical for an access institutio­n,” Dalton State President Margaret Venable said in a statement. “It’s not so much that our students are Hispanic as it is that our students tend to be first generation and low income. But we are working hard at improving gradation rates.”

She said the school is trying to improve its advising and remedial education programs to boost the graduation rate. The school might qualify regardless, because of the students who transferre­d to other colleges.

Of the students who came to Dalton State six years ago, spokeswoma­n Pam Partain said, about 4 percent eventually graduated at other Georgia colleges and universiti­es. Still, that boost would barely put Dalton State above the proposed threshold for federal funding, a measure that could be close every year.

Partain said the number of transfers is likely higher than reported, but keeping track is difficult. When a student leaves, the school does not have hard data on what happened to them unless he or she graduates in Georgia.

In theory, the student could leave Dalton State after one year, enroll at Berry College and then drop out. Dalton State would not have a statistic counting the student as a transfer.

And then there other variables. Does the proposed “completion rate” apply to both full-time and part-time students? And if a school offers both bachelor’s and associate degrees, can the school add those rates together? A spokesman for the House Committee on Education and the Workforce did not respond to an email seeking clarificat­ion last week.

According to the Center for American Progress, 1,700 institutio­ns are eligible for federal funding through Title III and Title V programs. Of those, the Center estimated, 28 could lose funding, including five in Georgia. Dalton State is not included because it is just now applying for grants as a Hispanic Serving Institutio­n.

Defending the benchmark, Foxx told the Raleigh News & Observer that requiring a 25-percent completion rate forces schools to perform better. Instead of a reward for taking in low-income or minority students, the government will only reward colleges if enough of those students receive degrees to prepare them for the workforce.

“We’re serious about promoting completion and actually focusing on the entire point of post-secondary education: getting the skills you need to have a successful life,” she said.

“The PROSPER Act delivers the serious reforms needed to empower students and families to achieve an essential part of the American dream: earning a high-quality education, finding a goodpaying job, and living a successful life.” — SPONSORS OF THE BILL REP. VIRGINIA FOXX, R-N.C., AND REP. BRETT GUTHRIE, R-KY.

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