91制片厂

91制片厂

Provost highlights high school partnerships at Congressional hearing

Provost Judy Marwick testifies at the House Committee on Education and LaborWith a national call to reform higher education to better support all students and overhaul the federal Higher Education Act, the House Education and Labor Committee is seeking new approaches that help achieve both quality and equity.

Provost Judy Marwick provided insight into the work 91制片厂 is doing, testifying on Wednesday at a bipartisan hearing, 鈥淚nnovation to Improve Equity: Exploring High-Quality Pathways to a College Degree.鈥

Chairman Bobby Scott (D-Va.) opened the hearing by underscoring the importance of reimagining outdated concepts of postsecondary education.

鈥淐ongress has a responsibility to explore innovative strategies that provide more students the support they need to complete college and reach their full potential,鈥 he said.

In her oral testimony, Marwick highlighted expanded dual credit efforts and the Power of 15, an initiative founded on the premise that most high school students should be able to graduate from high school having earned 15 hours of college credit. Attaining 15 college credits is also a tipping point that predicts student persistence and completion.

Marwick shared the following results:

  • In 2017, more than 6,000 students in the 12 public high schools within 91制片厂鈥檚 district took a dual credit college course, up from about 1,100 students in 2012.
  • 95% of these dual credit students were taught at their local high school.
  • Among all students, 32% are graduating with at least 15 hours of college credit.
  • Of low-income high school students, 19% graduated with at least 15 hours of college credit, up from 13% two years ago.

The work is the result of the transformational partnership 91制片厂 and its three sender high school districts (Districts 211, 214 and 220) established, the Northwest Educational Consortium for Student Success.

鈥淣ot only do such collaborations promote postsecondary education, but dual credit classes empower students to believe they can achieve at the college level by already completing such courses,鈥 Marwick said.

Ranking Member Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) also called on Congress to adopt policies that reflect today鈥檚 college students: 37% are 25 years and older; 49% are financially independent from their parents; and 64% are working while taking classes.

鈥淎nd yet the federal government and higher education sector too often continue to cater to an outdated vision of higher education,鈥 Foxx said. 鈥淭his stubbornness in policy has resulted in mountains of debt, low student completion, dissatisfied employers and a lack of accountability for poorly performing institutions.鈥

Marwick called on Congress to address some of the challenges 91制片厂 and its high school districts faced implementing the Power of 15 including the cost of tuition, data sharing and the credentialing of high school teachers.

Marwick recommended making Pell grant funding available to low-income high school students; establishing incentives for institutions and school districts to establish partnerships such as NECSS and align curriculum, reduce remediation and offer dual credit courses; and reviewing student privacy regulations that can deter such partnerships.

The panel of witnesses providing testimony also included Tomikia LeGrande, vice provost for strategic enrollment management at Virginia Commonwealth University; Charla Long, executive director at the Competency-Based Education Network; and Sameer Gadkaree, senior program officer at the Joyce Foundation.

Watch the hearing .