Written to conservatives, but very radical centrist in the way it calls for 
accountability and government funding.

Even as they create space for innovation in higher education, conservatives 
should be wary of simply writing a blank check to new entities and programs 
absent some accountability around the value delivered.

“ When there is clarity about outcomes and an ability to know that students 
have achieved mastery on valid and reliable assessments that are not reductive, 
then we create opportunities for endless innovation in delivery because 
delivery doesn’t have to be debated, only proved.”

Third-party credentialing for higher education | American Enterprise Institute 
- AEI
https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/third-party-credentialing-for-higher-education/
(via Instapaper)

Learn more about this paper series
Key Points

As conservatives create space for innovation in higher education, they should 
be wary of simply writing a blank check to new programs absent some 
accountability around the value delivered.
The federal government should foster greater accountability by supporting 
third-party credentialing entities that validate industry-valued skills.
Federal and state governments could then pay institutions as students 
demonstrate mastery on valid and reliable assessments that third-party bodies 
oversee.
Read the PDF.

Introduction

As conservatives consider ways to crash through the growing choke hold that 
college degrees have held in employers’ hiring processes, one idea that has 
gained currency is allowing federal student aid to follow students to 
unaccredited providers of education.1 Conservatives have also shown interest in 
funding competency-based programs—in which students earn credentials for 
exhibiting mastery of knowledge and skills, not because of the time they attend 
an institution.

Even as they create space for innovation in higher education, conservatives 
should be wary of simply writing a blank check to new entities and programs 
absent some accountability around the value delivered.

Accreditation—today’s answer for traditional colleges and universities—is a 
poor model to extend to unaccredited providers for two reasons. First, 
accreditors focus on inputs, such as the pedigree of who teaches students, 
instead of value in assessing the quality of an institution. Second, 
accreditors suffer from a conflict of interest because they are membership 
organizations that act as gatekeepers to the federal financial aid their 
members are eligible to receive.

There is another accountability mechanism also worth trying that could gain 
broader support as a discreet part of the higher education system. The federal 
government should foster a parallel higher education system by supporting 
third-party credentialing entities that validate industry-valued skills.

In such a world, institutions would no longer be the sole gatekeepers of 
credentials. The federal and state governments could pay institutions as 
students demonstrate mastery on valid and reliable assessments that third-party 
bodies oversee, which would help clarify the debates about whether learning at 
one institution is equivalent to that at another. This would in turn shift 
parts of higher education to a true competency-based learning system in which 
payment is untethered from inputs such as time and the credit hour, unlike 
today’s versions of competency-based learning in higher education. And it would 
allow institutions to charge—and governments to pay—based on verifiable 
outcomes. This idea would not have the federal government mandating a certain 
set of federal tests, a practice that would allow the federal government to 
dictate what is taught and learned in higher education.

Rather, the federal government would entrust third-party bodies that oversee 
assessments—rather than degree-conferring institutions—with real currency with 
employers. For example, to become a chartered financial analyst (CFA), a 
meaningful credential in the financial services industry, students must pass a 
series of three CFA exams. The CFA Institute, a nonprofit association of 
investment professionals that measures and certifies financial analysts’ 
competence and integrity, administers these exams.

Today, the Department of Education doesn’t pay the fees associated with taking 
this exam, and the programs that offer support for passing it—such as Wiley, 
Kaplan Schweser, and the Princeton Review—don’t receive federal financial aid. 
But the government could begin funding entities that, rather than certifying 
seat time, offer proof of mastery of a basket of industry-valued competencies 
and skills.

Similarly, an entity like Pathstream, which offers programs to help students 
learn digital skills in offerings such as Facebook digital marketing, Unity 
immersive design, and Salesforce administration—all programs with a certificate 
and associated assessment that Pathstream itself does not administer—could be 
paid directly when its students demonstrate mastery on the assessments that 
have real currency in the labor market beyond the employers that oversee them.

Importantly, the conservative path should not seek to overhaul the entire 
credit-hour and accreditation-guarded financing system. Instead, conservatives 
should seek to offer a parallel path to Title IV federal aid funds that 
colleges and other institutions can opt in to.

In such a system, providers could still set their own prices, and students 
could use federal financial aid dollars—a mix of Pell Grants and loans—to 
choose where they enrolled. But full payment would be withheld until a student 
demonstrated mastery on the external assessment.

To usher in a new era of constructive innovation in higher education, students 
would ideally not only need a transparent view into what skills they must 
master to earn a certificate but also be able to take the dollars to a wide 
array of providers they determine could help them. Programs could produce 
audited quality assurance reports based on standards around learning outcomes2 
as denoted by passing rates, the percentage of students completing and time to 
completion, placement and return on investment, and retrospective student 
satisfaction, among other data to help students make sound decisions about 
where to enroll.

To facilitate a diverse array of innovative providers from which students could 
choose, the third-party certification organizations must not act akin to 
traditional licensing bodies. That is, they must not prescribe the inputs that 
learners must possess to gain a credential, but focus only on mastery. For 
example, in legal education today, most state bar licensing authorities require 
applicants for the bar examination to have a JD from an American Bar 
Association–accredited law school upon completion of three years of legal 
education. Health care credentialing bodies specify similar 
requirements. These sorts of requirements should be abandoned. When there is 
clarity about outcomes and an ability to know that students have achieved 
mastery on valid and reliable assessments that are not reductive, then we 
create opportunities for endless innovation in delivery because delivery 
doesn’t have to be debated, only proved.

As society navigates the current uncertainty caused by a pandemic and the 
resulting recession, the federal government should not simply support 
traditional higher education institutions and preserve the status quo during 
this crisis. It should go beyond by working to establish a more 
learner-centered future. That means not only opening up federal 
financial aid to new forms of postsecondary education but also ensuring there’s 
value for individuals and taxpayers as it does so.

Read the full report.

Notes

Frederick M. Hess, “The Next Conservative Education Agenda,” National Affairs, 
Spring 2020, https://www.nationalaffairs. 
com/publications/detail/the-next-conservative-education-agenda.
Entangled Solutions, “Education Quality Outcomes Standards (EQOS),” 
https://www.educationqa.org/.


Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<RadicalCentrism@googlegroups.com>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to radicalcentrism+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/47F6EC2E-BD7B-4703-AEB7-33281B8742F6%40radicalcentrism.org.

Reply via email to