The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House panel shifts education’s emphasis

- Maureen Downey

A bill headed to the full House encourages moving students out of classrooms into internship­s, apprentice­ships and work-study.

In re-imagining higher education, a U.S. House committee focused on career-tech and job training. The rewrite of the Higher Education Act by the House Committee on Education and the Workforce carries a snazzy title, the PROSPER Act, which stands for Promoting Real Opportunit­y, Success, and Prosperity through Education Reform.

The question: Will students actually prosper under the sweeping reforms?

The 540-page bill passed out of committee earlier this month after a 14-hour contentiou­s session and goes now to the full House. (The Senate will take up the issue in the next few months.) The bill bends to the belief that not all students need a bachelor’s degree, but Georgia sends far too few kids to college. As the Georgia Partnershi­p for Excellence in Education noted in its annual report on the state’s most pressing challenges, 60 percent of job postings in Georgia require at least an associate degree, yet only about 38 percent of the adult population has at least that level of education.

PROSPER promotes short-term credential­s and encourages moving students out of classrooms into internship­s, apprentice­ships and work-study. It creates opportunit­ies for students to participat­e in industry-led earn-and-

learn programs and allows Pell Grants for shorter-term programs to get recipients into the workforce faster.

At the hearing earlier this month, House Committee on Education and the Workforce chair Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said her committee has heard the “overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans who do not have a baccalaure­ate degree. We affirmed the simple fact that all education is career education ... There is real dignity and value pursuing a technical skills-based education that allows them to be the best they can be in the careers they really want to pursue.”

The Obama crackdown on for-profit colleges, which Democrats saw as consumer protection, is treated in the GOP bill as an intrusion that limits students’ choices. A recent report from National Center for Education Statistics found students at for-profit colleges were twice as likely to default on their loans than students from public campuses.

For-profit schools also post the lowest graduation rates. The six-year graduation rate for first-time, fulltime undergradu­ate students who began college in the fall of 2009 was 59 percent at public institutio­ns, 66 percent at private nonprofit institutio­ns, and 23 percent at private for-profit institutio­ns. Yet, the bill erases the 90/10 rule, which prohibits for-profit colleges from earning more than 90 percent of their revenue from federal financial aid.

Rather than tighten rules on the for-profit industry, U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., said, “The bill relaxes the requiremen­ts ... beginning with the consolidat­ion of the definition of institutio­n of higher learning that, for many years, distinguis­hed the mission of schools educating students for life versus those giving access to shortterm programs to learn vocation skills. These schools are now considered on par with state flagship colleges and universiti­es, private liberal arts colleges and regional public schools. They are considered just another actor in the higher education field, although study after study tells us this is not the case.”

Complainin­g the federal loan program is chaotic, House Republican­s streamline­d it, eliminatin­g repayment options. Among the discarded options: the Obamaera regulation granting college graduates earning little money a reprieve from paying down their loans until their incomes rose. The GOP bill requires a minimum monthly payment, spurring concerns that the bill will push borrowers with the least financial resources into default.

The PROSPER Act ends loan forgivenes­s for students who go into public service, ending such incentives as the TEACH grants. The TEACH grants enticed education majors in high-need fields, STEM, special ed and foreign language, to teach in low-income schools.

 ?? AJC ?? The GOP rewrite of the federal Higher Education Act promotes more short-term credential­ing programs, but Georgia needs more college graduates, like these students at Georgia State last year.
AJC The GOP rewrite of the federal Higher Education Act promotes more short-term credential­ing programs, but Georgia needs more college graduates, like these students at Georgia State last year.
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