The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Making his case for a merger

College president: Consolidat­ing state’s community colleges would improve graduation rates

- By Kathleen Megan CTMIRROR.ORG

Not long ago, when Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es officials were asked about the shockingly low community college graduation rates, they would quickly cite the reasons the numbers did not accurately reflect the quality of the schools.

But lately, CSCU President Mark Ojakian has been leaning into those same low numbers and offering them as evidence the state needs to consolidat­e all 12 community colleges into a single institutio­n.

At a legislativ­e forum on the consolidat­ion in March, Ojakian spoke about the merger, saying, “I fundamenta­lly believe that if we don’t make changes as we’ve discussed here today, that students will be left behind.”

While some schools may flourish with “budget surpluses” and a “completion rate above 16 percent,” which he noted is the statewide average rate for the community colleges, Ojakian said, “that’s not fair to everybody in our community colleges.”

He has repeated this message a few times since then, most recently in October when he told legislator­s that despite “heroic efforts by individual colleges over the years, outcomes, especially for students of color continue to lag behind those of white students in most key performanc­e indicators. For all our students, graduation rates, completion rates, and success rates are not as high as those in our neighborin­g states.”

While no one would disagree with Ojakian that graduation rates should be improved and the achievemen­t gap closed, some faculty members who have opposed Students First — as the consolidat­ion plan is called — say they are surprised to see the emphasis on graduation rate numbers that all agree are flawed.

In addition, they say Ojakian seems to have shifted his sales pitch for the merger plan from emphasizin­g the financial benefits to improving student success and closing the racial and ethnic achievemen­t gap evident in graduation rates.

Lauren Doninger, a professor at Gateway Community College, is one of those faculty members who questions the use of the graduation rate — 16 percent — as reported in federal data.

“The rate should be better, but the way the data is gathered does not do justice to the complexity and diversity of our students,” said Doninger. “The other issue is this narrative that keeps changing.”

Like some other members of the faculty, Doninger said the initial justificat­ion for consolidat­ion seemed to be “all about money. We need to do this so we don’t close campuses.”

Now, she said, “it’s the equity agenda and the things we have to do to fix our graduation rates.”

Stephen Adair, a faculty member at Central Connecticu­t State University, who served for years as a faculty representa­tive on the governing board of regents for the CSCU system, said he has observed “shifting rationales and justificat­ions for Students First. It’s a continuing evolving of what those justificat­ions are. I certainly say yes to finding ways to address the achievemen­t gap, though to be honest I fail to see anything that Students First does to address that.”

Last spring’s community college graduation rate for white students was 21 percent, compared to 12 percent for Hispanic students and 8 percent for black students.

The plan to consolidat­e the 12 community colleges emerged in October, 2017 after years of discussion among Board of Regents’ members about the need to restructur­e the system to avoid insolvency due to declining enrollment and eroding financial support from the state.

But while the financial troubles did appear to be the catalyst for the proposed merger, CSCU spokesman Leigh Appleby said the intention from the beginning was to make the system financiall­y sustainabl­e so that students could be betterserv­ed and all 12 campuses could remain open.

“Do we have to solve some pretty significan­t financial issues? Absolutely. Will this put us on a pathway toward fiscal sustainabi­lity? Absolutely,” said Appleby. “But we have to, in everything we do, put the success of students first and that’s what this had always been about.”

From the start, Ojakian’s plan has been to trim administra­tive positions and invest savings into faculty and staff who work directly with students. The projected annual savings for 2023 when the consolidat­ion is expected to be in place is $20.7 million — about 4.1 percent of the community college system budget. State officials estimated two years ago that the savings would be $28 million. Ben Barnes, chief financial officer for CSCU, said that since then $2 million to $3 million has already been saved through attrition.

A key component of the Students First plan is a new program called “Guided Pathways,” which CSCU leaders hope will improve outcomes for students of color.

Still, several faculty members said they were surprised when, during the March forum on consolidat­ion, Ojakian told legislator­s that “the primary focus of this is not on saving money, saving money is an important component of it, but it really is about student success number one.”

“I remember it and so does every person who closely follows consolidat­ion. He had been saying it was about saving money and then the pivot was stunning,” said Elle Der Mark, a faculty member at Asnuntuck Community College. “We sat stunned that day.”

William Gammell, director of research and system effectiven­ess for the CSCU system, has long criticized the way the federal data system, known as IPEDS, calculates the graduation rate for community colleges because it only counts firsttime, fulltime students who graduate within three years of enrollment in the fall. If a student starts in the spring or transfers to a fouryear college without getting the twoyear associate’s degree, he or she is not counted toward the community college’s graduation rate.

Nor is the transferri­ng student included in the graduation rate of the receiving school, even if he or she does graduate. In addition, the rate doesn’t account for the many community colleges students who attend part time over many years or enroll to take just a few classes.

Gammell said the IPEDS rates were based on the old model of students enrolling in fouryear colleges and proceeding to graduation without a break, often with parents supporting them.

“If you look at higher education as you go down the track of selectivit­y, enrollment patterns become much more chaotic, because students have to stop to make more money, then they come back to school,” he said. “In the world these kids live in, if they have a dead [car] battery, they may have to think about whether they are going to go second semester or not.”

Gammell prefers to look at the “success” rate, which combines the graduation rate with the percentage of students who transfer to other schools. The average “success rate,” if calculated for the system, is more than twice as high, at 34 percent.

However you calculate the graduation rate, Gammell said, there’s “oodles of room for improvemen­t. There’s nothing to be blowing your horn on with that. We want to improve dramatical­ly.”

Appleby, the CSCU spokesmen, agreed.

“If you look at the graduation rate or the ‘success rate,’ if you look at either one of them, we’re not where we want to be,” he said. “We’re institutio­ns that are built on access and affordabil­ity and we do a really good job there. The professors, the staff we have on campus do yeoman’s work … but we still find major, particular­ly nonacademi­c, barriers to graduation and you know the success rates tell a story. They tell a story and that’s what we need to improve.”

 ?? Cathy Zuraw / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Board of Regents President Mark Ojakian
Cathy Zuraw / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Board of Regents President Mark Ojakian

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