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Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Gates to lead salute to landmark in higher education

WASHINGTON – One hundred and fifty years ago this summer, while men were dying in legions in Civil War battles a day's ride from the capital, President Lincoln signed a series of laws broadly expanding education, transportation, communications and commerce.

Bill Gates will push for better college graduation rates in a speech commemorating the Morrill Act on Tuesday. By Paul J. Richards, AFP/Getty Images

Bill Gates will push for better college graduation rates in a speech commemorating the Morrill Act on Tuesday.

By Paul J. Richards, AFP/Getty Images

Bill Gates will push for better college graduation rates in a speech commemorating the Morrill Act on Tuesday.

One of them — the Morrill Act establishing public universities in all states — will be commemorated here Tuesday when Cabinet secretaries, university presidents and other educational leaders gather to hear keynote speaker Bill Gates push for better college graduation rates. The commemoration comes as many cash-strapped states are cutting education funding and students owe more than $900 billion in college debt.

Boston College historian Heather Cox Richardson says the summer of 1862 was an unprecedented six-week span in which Congress passed the Morrill Act, the foundation for public universities and research; the Homestead Act, which offered free land for westward settlers; the Railroad Act, which led to the first transcontinental transportation and communications systems; and the first national income tax, which Lincoln needed to fight the war.

"We certainly, in the benefit of hindsight, can say each one of those things was an investment in the future," says Gates, co-founder of Microsoft. "You have to be impressed," Gates adds, saying that despite the "strife" of the times, Congress and Lincoln in 1862 laid "foundations for prosperity."

The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities is sponsoring the symposium, a continuation of sesquicentennial observances of the Civil War, which lasted from 1861 to 1865.

"I am still in awe" of that Congress, says Richardson, who is writing a book on the history of the Republican Party. "The men in it not only constructed a new nation, … but also a number of them gave their own sons to the cause. … They were trying to create a new kind of government that could build a prosperous nation at the same time an insurrection with a powerful army was literally trying to destroy the country."

Today, the nation and its education leaders face more tough choices. Americans "have to make a distinction between what is essentially current consumption of expenditures vs. investments for the next generation," says Peter McPherson, president of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. "And a couple of those investments have to be education at all levels."

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Issa plans hearing on scandal-ridden education regulation (Daily Caller)

Top GOP oversight official Rep. Darrell Issa of California is quietly planning a hearing on a scandal-ridden new regulation just finalized by the Education Department, according to a June 13 letter he sent to New York Democrat Rep. Edolphus Towns.

The move comes as Issa has been investigating a related Government Accountability Office (GAO) report that was plagued by errors and, according to some GAO officials, political interference from top-ranking Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa.

It is also in response to a May 24 letter from Towns requesting a hearing. Towns’ letter walks through some of the numerous issues facing the regulation, including the role of a group of Wall Street short sellers who lobbied the Education Department hoping to profit from strict new rules on the for-profit college sector.

June 2, the Education Department finalized the regulation, which puts strict new rules on for-profit or “career” colleges. The regulations were intended to address concerns from critics the schools use high pressure sales techniques to lure unprepared students into enrolling.

(Amid scandals, Education Department finalizes regulation on for-profit schools)

Issa suggests he’s planning to focus especially on the impact of the regulation on the economy.

“As I share concerns regarding the potential impact of this regulation on jobs, my staff has been closely following this regulation. In addition, the Committee is planning to schedule a hearing in the near future on the regulation,” Issa says in a June 13 letter to Towns.

As reported by The Daily Caller, Issa has been investigating an undercover sting unit at GAO that produced an error-ridden report on for-profit colleges, including interviewing the team that produced the report, staining the agency’s normally unimpeachable reputation.

The report was crucial to providing political momentum for the regulation. But in November, GAO issued a slew of corrections; the corrected version of the report paints a less critical picture of the schools.

Issa’s investigation is focused on the undercover team itself, not the for-profit proof per se. The team is described as having a history of faulty work.

As reported by TheDC, an internal GAO evaluation about what went wrong on the for-profit report faulted pressure from far left Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin as the reason for some of the reports “most obvious inaccuracies.”

The evaluation said “congressional staff” demanded the inclusion of numerous details in the report and, facing the “extreme short time frames” given to complete it, GAO “stretched whatever we could find” to fill in a key detail.

“They wouldn’t have included those references unless they felt bullied,” one former GAO official told TheDC.

But Harkin has angrily denounced the GAO’s allegations, his staff claiming his innocence publicly in a memo and privately in phone calls to key insiders.

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

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Issa plans hearing on scandal-ridden education regulation

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