The Mercury News

Big changes coming to key community colleges

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CALmatters columnist.

California’s 114 community colleges are the Rodney Dangerfiel­ds of higher education, overshadow­ed by the state’s four-year universiti­es and not getting much respect.

That’s true even though the community colleges’ 2.1 million full- and part-time students are more than three times the combined enrollment­s of the University of California and the California State University systems.

More importantl­y, low-cost, convenient­ly located community colleges are the primary gateway into post-high school job training and four-year degrees for those who would otherwise be stuck on the lower rungs of the socioecono­mic ladder.

Some big changes are coming to the system; some of them from Gov. Jerry Brown, who began his political career a half-century ago as a community college trustee in Los Angeles and will end it this year.

Under his prodding, the Legislatur­e has approved a new state-operated online community college that he says will give workers displaced by technology or other circumstan­ces new opportunit­ies to acquire marketable skills.

“I want people to be able to open their own imaginatio­ns whether they are 15 or 50. Now (students) have a real opportunit­y to not only learn but to get a certificat­e and get skills to earn more money, advance and pursue their dreams,” Brown told the state community college board after signing legislatio­n for the online college.

Brown and the Legislatur­e are also overhaulin­g how the colleges are financed, giving them more state aid but conditioni­ng some money on how well colleges are preparing students for jobs or transfer to four-year institutio­ns.

It’s meant to be a carrot to encourage better performanc­es by local colleges, who previously had been given allocation­s based on enrollment, but it’s also something of an anomaly.

The governor has stoutly resisted performanc­e measures for K-12 schools, even for his program of directing more state aid to help poor and “English-learner” students raise their academic skills.

He calls that reluctance “subsidiari­ty,” meaning trusting local education officials to do the right thing, and has rejected pleas of education reformers for more accountabi­lity.

It’s a little odd that he would reject such accountabi­lity for K-12 schools but insist on it for community colleges.

Still another Brown-backed change is called “California College Promise.” Participat­ing community colleges may provide financial incentives and guaranteed transfers to four-year colleges for community college students meeting certain criteria. The program also envisions community colleges partnering with K-12 schools to improve college preparatio­n.

Brown, however, is not the only source of change for the community colleges.

This month, the state community college board approved an agreement that allows students who have completed required lower-division work in some majors to transfer as juniors to private, nonprofit colleges and universiti­es. While students have sought such transfers in the past, the new agreement provides a more direct pathway for admission.

But perhaps the biggest change coming, albeit slowly, to the state’s community colleges is allowing some of them to offer four-year “baccalaure­ate” degrees in some fields.

Nine community colleges awarded 135 such degrees this year under a pilot program, involving such fields as dental hygiene, mortuary science and ranch management.

The state Senate has passed a bill to extend the pilot program, but it faces stiff opposition from faculty unions and the Assembly has killed extension legislatio­n in the past.

California has a looming shortage of college-educated workers and if the gap is to be closed, community colleges must be full partners and not merely academic stepchildr­en.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Some big changes to the system are coming from Gov. Jerry Brown, who began his political career as a community college trustee in Los Angeles.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Some big changes to the system are coming from Gov. Jerry Brown, who began his political career as a community college trustee in Los Angeles.

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