Powerful Forces Draw Academe Into the Fray
Economic fears and the high-school-reform movement have colleges under pressure to help improve the education of children
The Chronicle of Higher Education
By PETER SCHMIDT
After two decades, the revolution in the nation's elementary and secondary schools has finally reached academe's ivory towers. If college administrators listen beyond their institutions' walls, they can hear crowds of students and parents voicing frustration over colleges' high remediation rates and low graduation rates, visionaries urging the creation of entirely new education systems that would closely link schools and colleges, and political leaders issuing an ultimatum: Tend to the education of the masses, or the next thing you will hear will be battering rams.
For years most higher-education leaders thought they could stay above the fray, neither joining nor opposing the forces marching under the banner of education reform. With one public-opinion survey after another showing that people thought favorably of colleges — even as they were calling for the heads of schoolteachers, principals, and superintendents — it had seemed that colleges were safe from the forces of change unleashed by the 1983 publication of "A Nation at Risk," a highly critical federal report on the need for school reform
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
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