Probe with this essay is that nowhere are the views of employers   
--corporations,
government agencies, NGOs, non-profits, etc.-- taken into account.
 
BR comment
 
==================================================
 
from the site:
Inside Higher Ed
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Defining  Accountability





 
November 18, 2009 - 3:00am 


 
By _Doug  Lederman_ (http://www.insidehighered.com/users/doug-lederman)  


 
 
 
 
 
WASHINGTON -- Given the sprawling terrain covered by the American 
Enterprise  Institute's forum here on _"Increasing Accountability in American 
Higher 
Education"_ (http://www.aei.org/event/100134)   Tuesday, it was probably 
inevitable that the conversation would touch on so many  topics as to be almost 
incoherent.  
_Accreditation_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Accreditation%20-%20Kevin%20Carey.pdf) . _Finance_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Higher%20Education%20Finance%20and%20Accountability%20-%20Bridget%20Terry%20Long.pdf)
 . _Scholarly 
research productivity_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Faculty%20Scholarly%20Productivity%20at%20American%20Research%20Universities%20-%20Lawrence%20Martin.pdf)
 . 
College rankings. _Governance._ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/What2019s%20Governance%20Got%20to%20do%20With%20It%20-%20Anne%20Neal.pdf)
  Tenure. 
Standardized tests. With papers and  presentations on those topics and more, 
the 
daylong discussion was, not  surprisingly, all over the map. But if a major 
theme 
emerged from the assembled  speakers, most of whom fall clearly into the 
pro-accountability camp, it was  that as policy makers turn up the pressure on 
colleges to perform, they should  do so in ways that reinforce the behaviors 
they want to see -- and avoid the  kinds of perverse incentives that are so 
evident in many policies today. 
This is especially true, several speakers argued, on the thorniest of 
higher  education accountability questions -- those related to improving 
student  
outcomes. While the event looked at times like a reunion of Margaret 
Spellings'  Commission on the Future of Higher Education, with an agenda that 
featured not  just its former chairman but several advisers to the panel, it 
unfolded very  much focused on President Obama's call for increasing the 
proportion of  Americans with a postsecondary credential.  
Many of the speakers framed their remarks around changes that they saw as  
essential to helping the country ratchet up the number of young people and  
adults who not only enter higher education but emerge with what they need to 
 enter the work force. (Oh, and one or two people actually talked about how 
nice  it would be if policy makers still envisioned college as a place 
where people  learn about citizenship or just become educated for education's 
sake.) 
Peter Ewell, vice president of the National Center for Higher Education  
Management Systems, focused _his formal presentation_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Student%20Unit%20Records%20and%20Postsecondary%20Accountability%20-%20Pete
r%20Ewell%20.pdf)  on the growing network of state-based  data systems 
that, in his eyes, present the best chance of producing good  information on 
how 
students are faring in postsecondary education and beyond.  Ewell has long 
been a leading advocate of such data systems, which will be most  effective, 
he argued, if they are linked to databases of employment records and  then 
stitched together to create regional networks.  
But better data systems (which he acknowledged will take years to develop 
in  this way, and are opposed in some quarters of higher education) will help 
only  if the information they seek to collect is intelligently framed, 
which the most  widely used current measure -- graduation rates -- is not, 
Ewell 
and others  agreed. Ewell called for the development of a set of measures 
of "milestone  events" in a student's academic path -- things like a "basic 
skills conversion  rate" (capturing those who get to credit-worthy work after 
developmental  courses), definitions of "transfer ready" and "work force 
ready" (to describe  those who get meaningful academic or career skills but 
leave a community college  short of an associate degree), etc. 
And he said higher education leaders and state policy makers could make a  
shorter-term change that could start to alter the incentives for, and 
ultimately  the behavior of, institutions: shifting state funding formulas so 
that 
colleges  receive money based on how many students are still enrolled by 
the end of  academic terms, rather than at the beginning.  
"We have a performance funding scheme now -- it's called 'pay to enroll,' " 
 he said. "One of the simplest things we can do is to reimburse for courses 
 completed rather than courses attempted" by their students, he said. Added 
Stan  Jones, former commissioner of higher education in Indiana and now 
president of  the National Consortium on College Completion: "If we could make 
that change,  counting courses at the end of the semester rather than the 
beginning, that  would have powerful implications. Everybody would drag out 
their [list of]  courses and say, 'Where are we having problems?' " (It was 
acknowledged that  such an approach could create perverse incentives of its 
own, by discouraging  institutions from enrolling academically underprepared 
students who might be  unlikely to succeed -- a potential risk of the entire 
emphasis on "completion"  that is increasingly in vogue.) 
Many of the other speakers presented time-honored (read: familiar) 
approaches  to what AEI called "the multifaceted accountability equation in 
higher  
education." Naomi Schaefer Riley, deputy editor of The Wall Street  
Journal's Taste page and author of God on the Quad, argued for _reining in 
tenure_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Scaling%20Back%20Tenure%20-%20Naomi%20Riley.pdf)  
for groups of professors who she argued no  longer warrant it -- including 
instructors in vocational fields who don't need  the protection of academic 
freedom, gender and race studies professors with  openly political agendas, 
and scientists who, she said, have forfeited their  right to academic freedom 
by entering into corporate research arrangements that  limit their ability 
to publish.  
"Obviously we can't revoke the contracts of these professors now, but going 
 forward, there is no justification for continuing to offer lifetime 
contracts to  people in these fields." Riley said. "Whether because they have a 
political  agenda or their subjects do not necessitate the freedom to ask big 
questions or  because they seem happy to voluntarily give up their right to 
ask big questions  for the right price, these professors do not need their 
academic freedom  protected. And they don't need tenure. 
Countering Riley's argument that tenure impedes accountability, Gary 
Rhoades,  general secretary of the American Association of University 
Professors, 
argued  that tenure allows professors to "hold the line" on academic 
standards against  administrators who encourage instructors to raise the grades 
of 
complaining  students because they "don't want unhappy customers... 
Accountability is not  quite as straightforward as we think," said Rhoades, who 
described himself as  "not a 'just say no' guy" about accountability. "It's not 
a question of whether  [colleges and faculty should be held accountable], 
but how, and by whom," he  said. "It's about who's developing the measures, 
and what behaviors do they  encourage?" 
Among other issues raised at the AEI session: 
    *   _Kevin Carey_ 
(http://www.aei.org/docLib/Accreditation%20-%20Kevin%20Carey.pdf)  of Education 
Sector and Charles Miller, former  chairman of 
the Spellings Commission, both called for a national/federal body  to take 
over some or all of the quality control responsibility that now falls  to the 
regional accrediting agencies. "Regional accreditors should continue to  be 
in the business of peer review, but the federal government needs to be the  
objective protector of taxpayers' dollars," Carey said. Judith Eaton,  
president of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation, said that  
government 
regulation would be a major mistake, but said that accreditors  needed to 
come to agreement on "community-driven, outcomes-based standards" to  which 
colleges should be held. 
    *       *   Miller and Ben Wildavsky of the Kauffman Foundation 
defended the existence  and encouraged the proliferation of more rankings of 
colleges, on the theory  that the more information that exists in the public 
realm 
about colleges and  their operations, the better positioned citizens and 
policy makers will be to  make the choices they need. Higher education 
officials regularly talk about  the "uniqueness of each college" and the 
dangers of 
standardization. But while  they complain when policy makers seek to 
develop measures that compare one  institution against another, colleges "keep 
lists of peers with which they  compare themselves" on many fronts, Miller  
said.








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