While it may seem an intramural debate to some, much larger implications for taxpayers and students come from decisions where to offer college remedial coursework as well as what role this has in Louisiana’s system of higher education.
Now
into its second year of evaluation, the Board of Regents is experimenting with
offering these courses at both community colleges and baccalaureate-and-above
institutions. The literature seems inconclusive on whether these should be
offered at just community colleges or at both levels. For entry into senior
institutions, first-time freshmen students must show proficiency in at least
one of English and mathematics through minimum
American College Test scores well below the national average in each to
gain admittance. If coming up short in one, a remedial course must be taken.
The
case for not having them taught at both levels is that they dilute these institutions’
resources that should concentrate on students who already have demonstrated
capability to succeed. More crucially, faculty members at these senior institutions
are a more expensive resource to utilize in this endeavor, which gets passed on
to the taxpayer and student, because they have additional service duties and
research expectations.
But
it’s argued that by forcing all deficient students into at least one term in
some cases but in others a whole academic year at a community college, as they
would be embargoed from attending a senior institution in effect, as research
shows students taking this path are no more likely to complete an associate or
baccalaureate degree in a timely fashion than those without need for remedial
education. This may happen because community colleges lack resources that the
higher level schools have to assist marginal students, and they may be less
likely concentrate on the general educational requirements that include the
remedial areas which are needed as a foundation for degrees and put greater
emphasis on the technical or vocational aspects.
Understanding
this problem requires the proper conceptualization of it. Some argue that
four-year universities ought to teach these because of the superior ancillary
resources they can bring to bear and that otherwise, with some 60 percent of
high school students underprepared for college, “there won’t be enough students
to fill up all of these universities,” in the words of one advocate who claims
universities that consider such students as not suited for that level of work “have
the wrong way of looking at it.”
However,
this confuses conceptually the meaning of remediation. Echoing the confusion
surrounding what is poverty, where being poor is not having a lack of assets or
income but is a complex of attitudes that produces behavior resulting in low
income and/or assets. The same applies to remediation needs: remediation is not
a product of a low score or two, it comes from lacking the background,
intellectual development, or temperament to produce competency.
And
the proper venue to address these shortcomings is at the community college
level. Without any significant research or service components as a part of their
duties, faculty as these institutions should be expected to devote the vast
majority of their energies to teaching, on the basis that, compared to students
at senior institutions, many of their students need greater intervention and
assistance in order to learn. Further, this can be done more cheaply by
community colleges, to the benefit of taxpayers and students.
Arguments
that community colleges lack institutional capacity to address students in more
need are a red herring to this reality. That only means that, if this is the
case in Louisiana, its community colleges should focus more on building that
capacity. And this is not mutually exclusive with increasing their emphasize on
general educational requirements that allow for smoother transfer to
baccalaureate-and-above institutions and for greater success of those students
once they arrive, if more students who want bachelors’ degrees have to start at
community colleges because the senior institutions won’t teach remedial
courses.
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