The Delaware Gazette

Panel urges tuition, aid changes to boost Ohio grads

JULIE CARR SMYTH

AP State­house Correspondent

COLUMBUS — A panel study­ing ways to boost Ohio’s col­lege grad­u­a­tion rate says one way to encour­age com­ple­tion is to raise tuition on stu­dents to out-of-state rates when it’s tak­ing years and years to finish.

In its new report, the Com­plete Col­lege Ohio Task Force also rec­om­mended that insti­tu­tions offer tuition guar­an­tees tied to a stu­dent com­plet­ing course­work on a set sched­ule, and dis­trib­ute finan­cial aid “as a pay­check,” rather than in a lump sum, to encour­age stu­dents to work less and take more classes.

Ohio Chan­cel­lor Jim Petro told edu­ca­tors gath­ered for a con­fer­ence in Colum­bus that it’s imper­a­tive Ohio boost the num­ber of res­i­dents who com­plete a col­lege degree or certificate.

“Com­ple­tion is prob­a­bly our most impor­tant objec­tive as peo­ple engaged in the Uni­ver­sity Sys­tem of Ohio,” he said.

Only about a quar­ter of Ohioans hold col­lege degrees, about five points below the national aver­age. The lag has left many non-degreed Ohioans unem­ployed, even as high-paying jobs open up in fields like tech­nol­ogy, health care and energy.

The task force made 20 rec­om­men­da­tions in all. They included get­ting fam­i­lies and high schools more engaged — sooner — in stu­dents’ col­lege plan­ning, bet­ter defin­ing what it means to be ready for col­lege, and boost­ing Ohioans’ finan­cial lit­er­acy and knowl­edge of avail­able jobs.

The panel urged pol­i­cy­mak­ers to replace the Ohio Grad­u­a­tion Test with a nation­ally stan­dard­ized assess­ment, such as the ACT, and admin­is­ter end-of-year exams to fresh­men, sopho­mores and juniors that mea­sure knowl­edge in spe­cific con­tent areas.

The sce­nario involv­ing tuition hikes to out-of-state rates would only kick in after a stu­dent has been in col­lege an exces­sive amount of time to be deter­mined by each uni­ver­sity, under the panel’s proposal.

The group made no sug­ges­tion of freez­ing col­lege tuitions, as Ohio has done in the past. Tuition increases are cur­rently capped at 3.5 per­cent annu­ally, and uni­ver­si­ties across the state — Ohio State, Miami and Ohio uni­ver­si­ties among them — have approved hikes within that system.

But the panel sug­gests other ways to make col­lege access eas­ier for many types of stu­dents. Mil­i­tary train­ing and expe­ri­ence would earn col­lege credit, advanced high school and tech­ni­cal school cred­its would more eas­ily count toward a degree, and work­force train­ing would be rewarded.

The task force also rec­om­mended what’s called “intru­sive” advis­ing, where help is pro­vided to stu­dents whether they ask for it or not. The approach links a hand-selected col­lege adviser to each stu­dent who mon­i­tors their aca­d­e­mic progress and encour­ages involve­ment in stu­dent activ­i­ties, clubs and causes that could increase their chances of stay­ing in col­lege until they earn their degree.

AP News Posted by on Nov 13 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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