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RESPONSE TO LUMINA FOUNDATION REPORT: "Unequal Opportunity:
Disparities in College Access Among the 50 States"
For Immediate Release:
January
3, 2002
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Contact:
Laura Wilcox or Keith Moore
(202) 466-7230
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Note: From January 4 to 8, 2002 contacts can be reached
at Sanibel Harbour Resort & Spa, (941) 466-4000
STATEMENT BY RICHARD EKMAN
PRESIDENT, COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES
January 7, 2002
The Lumina Foundation's report released today that evaluates "accessibility"
for all colleges and universities is designed to help state policymakers
"determine to what extent the current system of higher education
provides access to a college education for its residents." However,
Unequal Opportunity misses the mark on offering concrete recommendations
to help state governments make decisions that will make a difference in
access and affordability.
It is state governments, not the leaders of private institutions, that
can truly make a difference in both access and affordability, but the
report seems to misunderstand the states' role, and in so doing misses
a key opportunity. Many private institutions are more than ready to serve
additional numbers of median- and low-income students, if state governments
would either provide appropriate student financial aid or establish more
of a level playing field through their tuition policies at public institutions.
The report's authors failed to consider degree completion as a critical
part of their research -- a significant design flaw. They do not seem
to understand that independent institutions nationwide are already doing
a great deal, not only through institutional student aid but also through
a variety of academic and personal support programs, to ensure that students
not only enter educational programs but can complete them. The facts are
these: Average family income of students at private colleges and universities
is lower than that of students at state institutions; private colleges
and universities enroll fewer than one-quarter of all undergraduates but
account for nearly one-third of the graduates; first-generation college
students at private colleges are much more likely to complete a bachelor's
degree within five years (63 percent) than at public institutions (46
percent); and attrition rates are higher at public institutions than at
private institutions-at every level of institutional affluence and selectivity.
Given the demonstrable superior performance of private institutions in
providing access to low-income students, it is startling that the Lumina
report does not discuss the policy implications for state governments
that are concerned with improving access to higher education. State governments
are now cutting spending as tax revenues fall, and higher education is
no longer a top priority. Establishing new branch campuses of state systems
of higher education and allowing existing, large institutions with dismal
attrition rates to grow even larger-never cost-effective options-are now
simply unaffordable.
Meanwhile, such considerations as the advantage of filling underutilized
capacity at private institutions at only marginal cost to the state, the
extraordinary subsidy through private funds of students at these institutions,
and the absence of any burden to the taxpayer should have led the report's
authors to put forward a much wider range of policy recommendations.
Compounding the report's failure to consider degree completion is the
choice made by the authors to include, along with their written analysis,
state-by-state tables listing individual institutions, including private
institutions, even though the written analysis focuses only on state policy
involving public institutions. The disjuncture between the written analysis
and the tables, which list virtually all private colleges and universities,
as well as many flagship public institutions, as "unaffordable,"
is a disservice to all concerned, including prospective students, parents,
and high school counselors. The report could cause considerable damage
to the ongoing efforts of colleges, financial aid and scholarship services,
and others that are working hard to point out that college is, in fact,
affordable by most people.
TALKING POINTS ON LUMINA FOUNDATION REPORT
Lumina Foundation of Indianapolis, IN has embargoed for release on January
7, 2002 a report titled, Unequal Opportunity: Disparities in College
Access Among the 50 States, another in its New Agenda Series of reports.
This report, authored by Samuel M. Kipp, III, Derek V. Price, and Jill
K. Wohlford, portrays for state policymakers the disparities in prospective
postsecondary education opportunities. The report focuses on available
options for four key groups:
- traditional college-age, dependent children from low-income families;
- dependent children from median-income families;
- non-traditional adults who are independent, but have only low-income
resources; and
- non-traditional adults who are independent, but have only median-income
resources.
The study classified 2,800 public and private institutions, both two-year
and four-year, in the 50 states and District of Columbia according to
their accessibility to typical residents, defined in terms of both admissibility
and affordability. It then lists individual institutions based upon their
affordability for typical college-bound youth in each state.
From among 1,054 private institutions it studied, it identified only
256 independent institutions as both admissible and affordable to median-income
traditional students. It lists 78 independent institutions that were both
admissible and affordable to median-income non-traditional students. The
report finds that 28 states have no private four-year colleges that are
affordable to low-income students and 21 more that have none for median-income
independent students.
Major concerns are that the report misses a key opportunity to issue
concrete policy recommendations for state governments that could make
a difference in both access and affordability; it ignores crucial aspects
of private higher education and could broaden public misperceptions about
that sector; and its findings could be used by the regional and local
press to portray all private colleges and universities as unaffordable.
The report fails to include degree completion as a crucial aspect
of access.
- Independent institutions are already doing a great deal, not only
through institutional student aid but also through a variety of academic
and personal support programs, to ensure that students not only enter
educational programs but can complete them. Indeed, average family income
of students at private institutions is lower than at public institutions,
and the gap is growing.
- The failure to consider degree completion as part of this research
is a significant design flaw. Since the now-outdated 1970 Willingham
study, which this report uses as a model, there has been growing understanding
that progress toward degrees is a fundamental tenet of access and choice.
- Private colleges and universities enroll fewer than one-quarter of
all undergraduates, but account for nearly one-third of the graduates;
first-generation college students at private colleges are much more
likely to complete a bachelor's degree within five years (63 percent)
than at public institutions (46 percent); and attrition rates are higher
at public institutions than at private institutions-at every level of
institutional affluence and selectivity.
- The report overemphasizes factors that compare incomes and factors
that contribute to entering college, but ignores the implications of
the outcomes of attaining a degree from a private institution. The authors
weighed data for how entry into postsecondary institutions on a state-by-state
basis was accomplished, but stopped short of explaining the eventual
outcomes of the students' attendance.
- Private institutions educate and return their students into the workforce
in a substantially shorter time than do public institutions. Extra years
of enrollment at a public institution with taxpayers' subsidy, and foregone
income should be part of any calculation of costs.
The report fails to portray a broad range of state policy options,
particularly those that might involve private colleges and universities.
- The report is culpable for not discussing the numerous new, aggressive
state-supported financial aid programs that have substantially improved
the economics of affording college. These new programs have altered
the horizons in both private and public institutions for many students
in numerous states.
- The report fails to draw connections between the growth of state non-need-based
student aid funding and the private college role, nor does it discuss
the policy implications for state governments that are concerned with
improving access to higher education. Current approaches, such as new
branch campuses of state systems of higher education and allowing existing,
large institutions with dismal attrition rates to grow even larger-never
cost-effective options-are now simply unaffordable.
- Many private institutions are more than ready to serve additional
numbers of median- and low-income students, if state governments would
either provide appropriate student financial aid or establish more of
a level playing field through their tuition policies at public institutions.
The report, however, shifts the burden of decision from states to private
institutions.
- The report ignores such considerations as the advantage of filling
underutilized capacity at private institutions at only marginal cost
to the state, the extraordinary subsidy through private funds of students
at these institutions, and the absence of any burden to the taxpayer.
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