Obama is over the “community college” stigma. Now it’s your turn.

Written by Kate Lehnhof @ 4:36 pm on July 15, 2009  

Ok all you My Colleges and Careers Fans, It’s 4:30 on a Wednesday and I’m feeling outspoken.

Growing up in Utah sometimes I heard jokes about going to Utah Valley State College and people calling it “High School by the Highway.” A few years and a good deal of refiner’s fire induced maturity later, that “High School by the Highway,” is now Utah Valley University and nobody needs to defend choosing to go there for college. It has programs that other more erudite Universities in the area don’t like Aviation and their education program is highly competitive.

I’ve grown to respect community college and when I saw Slate.com this afternoon I saw that I just got a HUGE endorsement. From Mr. Obama himself. In a speech Tuesday in Warren, Mich., he proposed sinking nearly $12 billion into revamping the country’s community-college system. The proposal allocates $9 billion in grant money to boost academic programs and raise graduation rates, plus another $2.5 billion to upgrade school facilities. It would also fund open-source online courses so that schools can do more classes online.

And no, I’m not suggesting that the College of Rural Town, USA is going to comparable to Harvard. I don’t think many are under that illusion either. The truth is that many of the nation’s hardest most intelligent workers come from all walks of life. You don’t have to be a Vanderbilt anymore. So it’s time we started supporting more money on the Johnsons and the Smiths.

I don’t want to make any hasty generalizations so take the following statement with a grain of salt: Community colleges are filled with people who actually want to go to college.

The Slate article describes it perfectly, “We live in a knowledge economy, and we’ve set up education as if we’re an agrarian culture. It used to be that you could educate the top 10 percent, he said, and the rest of the population would get unskilled jobs. But in a global economy, where even professions like cashier or truck driver require constant upgrades in technology and information, a high-school diploma is not always enough. That said, a pricey Ivy League degree may not be necessary, either. Community colleges fill that hole….With jobs going overseas at ever-faster rates, America needs an educated, flexible work force ready to change jobs on short notice. That work force is more likely to emerge from community colleges than from, say, the Dartmouth English department.”

So whether you are currently writing your thesis on Milton over at Harvard or if you take online classes after work, embrace your inner Don Henley and “Get Over It.” Community College is here to stay.

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1 Comment »

  1. Yes, this should increase the number of college graduates in the country.

    Use technology to advance education and not just communication and entertainment. For online learners (which is almost everyone), use productivity tools such as MySpeed from enounce to speed up or slow down e-lectures depending on your effective learning pace.

    [Reply]

    Comment by Celina Macaisa — August 1, 2009 @ 8:55 pm

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