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Smith, Peter – Trusteeship, 2011
Boards do not have to wait for coming reforms to improve pricing and academic structure for students. They can have a significant impact immediately by making recognized learning portable, simplifying pricing, and reducing costs to students. Developmental education, blended and online learning, and adaptive learning are being touted as…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Persistence, Academic Achievement, Online Courses
Hartle, Terry W. – Trusteeship, 2008
In August, President Bush signed the Higher Education Opportunity Act into law and in doing so completed the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. The six-year effort spanned three Congresses and required 14 short-term extensions of the underlying law to ensure that student-aid benefits would remain available while deliberations continued.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Federal Aid, Educational Policy, Federal Legislation
Baum, Sandy – Trusteeship, 2010
The financial-aid policies and practices of colleges and universities have made too many headlines in recent times to remain the domain of technical experts. Boards of trustees, like other constituencies that are responsible for the health and well-being of postsecondary institutions, should be asking how issues being raised about student…
Descriptors: Low Income, Student Financial Aid, Colleges, Educational Finance
Kirwan, William – Trusteeship, 2009
In several high-profile speeches this year, President Barack Obama has set an ambitious educational goal: By 2020, the United States will have the highest proportion of adults with a college degree in the world. The emphasis on education in both his proposed budget for fiscal 2010 and in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Academic Achievement, Young Adults, Presidents
Baum, Sandy; McPherson, Michael – Trusteeship, 2009
Most economists expect the current economic downturn to be one of the most severe since World War II. In fact, there is a very real danger that the changing circumstances of students, families, state and federal governments, and educational institutions could interact to significantly diminish educational opportunity in the United States. The most…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Federal Government, Educational Opportunities, Student Financial Aid
Breneman, David W. – Trusteeship, 2009
The current downturn has the potential to be more severe and longer lasting than the recessions of the 1970s, '80s, '90s, and early 2000s. By now, rivers of ink have been spilled documenting the financial and economic crisis afflicting the United States and much of the globe. While numerous articles have examined the impact on higher-education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Economic Climate, Student Behavior, Teacher Behavior
Wellman, Jane – Trusteeship, 2009
As Americans near the end of the first decade of the new millennium, higher education in the United States is caught in a classic "good news/bad news" dilemma. The good news? Broad recognition of the importance of higher education to the country's future, along with larger federal funding increases than at any time in their history. The bad news?…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Paying for College, Student Costs, Accountability