Achievement Gap in Higher Ed Persists
Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010College competition is fierce. It serves to widen the achievement gap at elite colleges. There is an interesting comment at the end of the article on moving resources to community colleges. I am a big fan of community colleges, particularly our local ones, Dutchess and Ulster. The Community College Research Center at Teacher’s College is a great source for research and analysis about the unique approach of these colleges.
Many community colleges provide more of a vocational than academic approach, a good thing in diversifying educational opportunities. However, if the achievement gap issue is a result of economically disadvantaged students not having access to elite academic environments, how will reallocation of resources to community college programs bridge that gap? Or will it only make it larger?
We need vocational programs balanced with academic programs. But if we channel students and resources to either higher education choice based purely on economic advantage (or lack thereof) and not on merit, the inequity persists, grows and festers.