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Obama Addresses White House Summit On Community Colleges

First Posted: 10/05/10 05:56 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:55 PM ET

Obama Community College

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama called Tuesday for community colleges to produce an additional 5 million graduates by 2020 as he convened a White House summit to spotlight the two-year institutions he said are more important than ever to the country's competitiveness.

Calling them the "unsung heroes of America's education system," Obama said community colleges "may not get the credit they deserve, they may not get the same resources as other schools, but they provide a gateway to millions of Americans to good jobs and a better life."

Obama made his comments in the East Room at the start of a daylong meeting with officials from some of the nation's 1,200 community colleges along with businesses and philanthropies. It was the first such gathering at the White House.

Jill Biden, herself a community college teacher and wife of Vice President Joe Biden, presided. The purpose was to boost the schools that provide millions of students with skills training and a less expensive path to a college degree – even as they're increasingly challenged by climbing enrollments and high dropout rates.

A month from crucial midterm elections, Obama also used the occasion to accuse congressional Republicans of wanting to slash education spending, as he continued to try to paint an alarming contrast with the GOP.

"We are in a fight for the future, a fight that depends on education," the president said. Cutting spending would be "like unilaterally disarming our troops right as they head to the front lines."

Obama signed legislation this year pumping $2 billion into community colleges – $500 million a year for four years – although that was far less than advocates had hoped for

Community colleges saw a 17 percent enrollment surge between 2007 and 2009 as the economic downturn sent laid-off workers searching for new skills ,and tight budgets forced families to downsize educational goals for their children. At the same time, the colleges are themselves badly underfunded and forced to spend heavily on remedial education for poorly prepared students.

The White House summit came a day after the president announced a new public-private partnership linking major corporations like the Gap and McDonald's with community colleges to improve job training. Obama said the privately funded Skills for America's Future program would make it easier to connect job-seeking students with businesses looking to hire.

The event also featured commitments from private institutions including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which announced the launch of a $35 million, five-year competitive grant program to boost community college graduation rates.

Given the strains on community colleges, it will be a challenge to transform them into a greater engine of change than they already are. Martha Kanter, undersecretary of education, said just 25 percent of community college students get a certificate or an associate's degree or transfer to a four-year institution within three years of enrollment.

Obama's goal of adding 5 million more community college graduates over the next decade would represent a 50 percent increase in the number of students graduating, according to the American Association of Community Colleges. It's a crucial piece of Obama's goal for the U.S. to produce the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020.

Despite the challenges, respondents in a new poll by The Associated Press and Stanford University were generally positive about the quality of education offered by community colleges. Nearly 70 percent said the quality of education at community colleges is excellent or good. When asked whether colleges prepare students for the work force, 62 percent said yes for community colleges and 68 percent said yes for four-year schools.

___

Associated Press writers Darlene Superville in Washington, Eric Gorski in Denver and Dorie Turner in Atlanta contributed to this report.


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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama called Tuesday for community colleges to produce an additional 5 million graduates by 2020 as he convened a White House summit to spotlight the two-year insti...
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama called Tuesday for community colleges to produce an additional 5 million graduates by 2020 as he convened a White House summit to spotlight the two-year insti...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:46 AM on 10/06/2010
Why is it we measure community college students' completion rates based upon a 3 year cycle? Why aren't we considering how many of these students go 1/2 time, thereby taking 4-6 years to get their AA or AS Degree?

I think if the focus of academics and financial aid were more on supporting the student progressing at the rate their busy life allows (they have families, careers, etc.) without degrading academic integrity our rate of those truly succeeding and earning their desired credentials would increase dramatically. If they are willing to persist, we should support them in that persistence. They will take their credential much more seriously if they had to sacrifice to get it, and I propose they will be much more apt to actualy try to utilize it more fully.

It's not the intent, but trying to force students to complete their degrees immediately after high school and within 4 years for a BA/BS shuts many students out. Not all folks can do this, or are emotionally ready to go to college out of high school, and not all students are able to drop everything to take 12-15 credits per semester - so why penalize them? The smart ones who fall into this trap either desperately try to succeed at the cost of relationships, family, and health or quickly decide to drop out or forget trying altogether.
10:41 AM on 10/08/2010
You miss the point. 80% of all students who enroll in community colleges drop out. Permanantly. There is only a 20% graduation rate. Regardless of time to graduate. The average community college student is 30 years old, and already employed. And 20% are already employed in their desired field of training prior to attending community college. And community colleges have to spend far too many resources on remedial education for those students who were behind in high school, middle school, grade school. This simply is not a worthwhile investment of our tax dollars. Our country needs to place more emphasis on early childhood education, starting at birth. Too many of our kids start kindergarten already behind. And they never catch up. I know you're a community college staff member, but let's be honest. We need to start early so our kids, in 20 years, will be ready to attend your community college and actually graduate with a degree and get a job. To spend money remediating kids who are already adults is ridiculous. Where is our common sense.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
11:34 AM on 10/06/2010
The president's emphasis on "education" might well be a good thing on balance, but it doesn't so far convince me. It's too narrow. It's education in a vacuum. It even seems priggish--a new-bourgeois kind of thing. Respectable but dull.
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I want education to be raw and visionary. People must be educated toward some huge societal goal. Education should not be a goal but a means. The goal might well be getting America to change course completely and become the nation with the lowest carbon footprint by 2020. Then we educate people around that vision.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YMBM
10:50 PM on 10/05/2010
I am truly impress with the Community College Summit! It will provide opportunities to so many who did not think obtaining a college degree was possible! Mrs. Biden did an excellent job!
10:06 AM on 10/06/2010
community colleges are great for new students and retraining. The loan cap program that Obama passed doesnt start until 2014. What do we do for students going to college now? Ive been out of work since 2006. My kids are in college now! How do I pay and make sure they dont pay for over 20 years? Very wrong and unfair. Vote every Republican out of office now.
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neige
06:49 PM on 10/05/2010
I just enrolled in my community college. Took the placement exam this morning and start classes Nov 1. Can't wait!!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
benji85
10:40 PM on 10/05/2010
Good luck.
04:34 PM on 10/05/2010
They have been trying this idea in North Carolina for the last 5 years. Guess what - unemployment is 15%. Real unemployment is about 22%.

Please, go back to the drawing board. It doesn't matter how much education a person has if employers are not hiring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
neige
06:51 PM on 10/05/2010
Try what idea?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Robert David Steele
04:05 PM on 10/05/2010
My two oldest sons benefitted enormously from the Northern Virginia Community College (NVCC). First off, their brain power is off the scale so they blew off high school. NVCC they took seriously, to the point that my oldest was able to transfer 31 credit out of state, and my middle son is thriving. In Virginia anyone who does well in two years of community college is guaranteed admission to one of Virginia's state schools which include national giants such as University of Virginia, George Mason University, and William & Mary College. I personally feel we should be doing much more with community colleges as well as vocational schools, with mandatory summer internships in the trades in high school and the professions in college, and with national service (Armed Forces or Peace Corps by choice, Homeland Service all others).
09:33 PM on 10/05/2010
It is also worth noting that many communities offer high school students the chance to take community college courses during the regular school day. These classes give students a chance to earn college credit, before they even leave high school. The best part about these programs is that they are usually free, or offered at a highly discounted rate.
11:14 AM on 10/05/2010
The mission of a two-year Community College is to provide educational opportunities to students locally, nationally, and internationally, so they continue their education in a four-year university. It is less expensive if a student does two-years in a Community College. Some technical fields only require a two-year degree which a Community College can provide. Community Colleges are a stepping stone to four-year colleges and are very much needed during these tough economic times.
09:41 PM on 10/05/2010
Absolutely. Community colleges may rescue the next generation, given the competitive global economy. Rather than competing regionally for jobs (as did their parents), the emergent economy has those young persons now entering the job market, in a global competition for jobs. It will only get even more competitive down the road. They need all the education (particularly in technology) they can get, and the community college cost is not prohibitive, as are most universities. They're the best investment and value in America.
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NVEd
I love mountains.
10:18 AM on 10/05/2010
Some very interesting posts. All I know about community colleges is that I graduated from a California community college in 1974 with an AA degress in computers and got a good job which led to a career from which I retired in 1994. I have a young friend in a Nevada community college studying nursing and will soon have a granddaughter in a California community college studying nursing. I am a community college fan.
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Paulette carty
NICENESS
09:49 AM on 10/05/2010
God bless you Mr. President....sensible people know you are doing your best!
04:36 PM on 10/05/2010
"God bless you Mr. President....sensible people know you are doing your best.... to cut the US down to size so we are part of the global community, not running it.

There, I fixed that for you.
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shamumbo
06:45 PM on 10/05/2010
We've already been downszed ... by 30 years of insane conservative ecomonics!
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09:39 AM on 10/05/2010
I guess he has hope of changing the 'mush minds" in college, the rest of us think for ourselves...
09:45 PM on 10/05/2010
The problem is that most people don't think at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
09:15 AM on 10/05/2010
Talk about classism and a raw deal!! They are going in to community colleges partnered with firms like McDonald's, Proctor and Gamble, etc. Go to commmunity college to get a job at McDonald's? You have got to be kidding me. This is the biggest pile of BS. Why would anybody go into debt paying for community college to get a job at McDonald's or in a detergent factory for P&G? This is a pantload of carp. I am sure that NO ONE has intentions of going to college to get a job at McDonald's. This is the best that can be done to even up the gap between those with money for big schools and those without! This smacks of indentured servitude. So I have the intellect for Harvard but I am going to be herded into a community college for this? I don't think so. This is a waste of taxpayer money.
12:07 PM on 10/05/2010
manager trainee's would be one partner ship. Another would be a solid, smart work force that spends 2 years going to a CC while working @ P&G, Mcdonalds, etc before going on to a 4 year school. I could even see a nice program that involves students working in the labs of P&G before pursuing a 4 year degree.....

it takes a narrow and small mind to look @ this and say what you have said.
04:28 PM on 10/05/2010
Could not have said it better myself. fanned and favorited
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10:59 PM on 10/05/2010
I spent seven years working in a JNJ laboratory before I went on to earn my 4 year degree (2 years at a CC) and then the PhD.. so the situation you describe is not abnormal.
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10:58 PM on 10/05/2010
Some of us who happen to be pursuing graduate degrees at institutions like Harvard started at quaint community colleges..
09:07 AM on 10/05/2010
Community colleges is the easy answer. Even Bush talked about community colleges (he did nothing but talked about it). What about students being priced out of our big universities? What about students who need trade school, not college? What about those that have BAs and MBAs but no jobs? Do they go to community college too, to start over? Alot of them wont and many wont get hired even if they do. We need ALOT more serious discussion on this. Community colleges dont have all the answers.
12:10 PM on 10/05/2010
I don't think anyone is preaching that they do have all the answers. They are just one piece of the puzzle. Yes a lot does need to occur - but you can't solve all problems simultaneously.

The big difference between Obama and others - he is trying to act in the best interest of the US and its citizens. Meanwhile the republicans bury their heads in the sand and pretend that globalization can be reversed and we can magically make low skill jobs just re-appear here for a nice living wage. That will not happen - globalization is here to stay folks.
09:55 PM on 10/05/2010
Exactly. We may retain service jobs, but manufacturing job loss in the U.S. will only increase with increased globalization. Therefore, manufacturing workers need to transition to jobs with a focus on technology--jobs of the future. They can make this transition through community colleges, where future workers can also be trained into a ready and able labor force in fields that are emergent. Jobs that are highly desirable today, did not even exist twenty years ago. We have to get on this fast-moving train before it passes us by, and leaves us in a Third World situation.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
02:33 AM on 10/06/2010
they keep going to school living on loans hoping that one day they will land a job. Its a shame cause once that day comes, they will have to start paying back the loans. And the jobs that are out there now, and in our future for years to come, are not paying nearly what they did just 5 years ago. What once was considered good starting pay for 4 year degrees, is not there anymore. Now if a new 4 year grad can get 12 bucks and hour, they are doing pretty good. The 40k a year with bennies is a thing of the past. But universities charge like starting pay is now 60k with bennies. Its not right at all. And they still treat the paying students like crap on top of it.
09:49 AM on 10/06/2010
I agree so when do the 4 year colleges decide to scale back their prices? If all the economy can offer is 10-15/hr jobs, why the high prices? They need to seriously readjust so THEY dont leave our children behind and seriously in debt they cant get out of.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kobrock1
Clever only seems easy
08:10 AM on 10/05/2010
This might signal that Mr. Obama intends to more closely emulate Bill Clinton, who's relatively small policy initiatives were greeted with wider acceptance.  Mr. Obama is beginning to realize that his mandate was more for the amorphous "hope and change," and decidedly not to deliver The United States, a worker's paradise.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
02:34 AM on 10/06/2010
if he brings back midnight basketball, I will believe it.
07:36 AM on 10/05/2010
"First lady Michelle Obama is asking her husband's supporters to pitch in with cash to help Democrats recreate the get-out-the-vote machine that helped deliver Barack Obama the White House two years ago."   

This is like the guy who ignores a girl all year....doesn't call her, doesn't invite her anywhere and then
one month before the prom, (and after every other girl has turn him down), he calls the girl he has ignored all year and expects her to say  yes.
06:59 AM on 10/05/2010
One month to the election and suddenly this guy has become the 'education president'.

What a joke
07:57 AM on 10/05/2010
'he has always been the education president'..just that he was busy saving the country from the republican mess..also by the way ignored education..wanted to keep people ignorant to get votes..u know the white blue collar worker republican base that they love to keep ignorant with slogans
isadora
Leftie, educator, labor activist, Unitarian Univer
08:52 AM on 10/05/2010
Amen. And he couldn't have picked a more wonderful example of the quality of instruction at community colleges than Dr. Jill Biden. I work at a community college in the ESL department. Our lesser known success is instructing non-English speakers and helping some of them to return to professions at which they have valuable experience and to which they are dedicated. We refit teachers, nurses, and members of other professions to work at those professions again to the good of our entire country. And the people involved are very happy with this. Hey you Repubs-they then pay more taxes since they earn more money. The President has been there all along, and this is a good time for he and the Second Lady to come forward and articulate it so well. God Bless President Obama and Dr. Jill. You have helped community colleges to make their contributions known.
09:26 AM on 10/05/2010
He hasn't saved anything--except big Wall St. firms and his buddies. He has helped to create the mess by voting for TARP while he was campaigning, and maintained it. Goldman Sachs got him elected. Education president--yeah, he's been a real education to a lot of Democrats. "Talking" does not equal "leadership."
08:01 AM on 10/05/2010
Also, u did not notice he passed a bill for student loan reform whereby millions of students can now go to college instead of enriching coporations..Where have u been ..stop listening to fix news..it dumbs people down..keep them uninformed..expand your horizons
isadora
Leftie, educator, labor activist, Unitarian Univer
08:55 AM on 10/05/2010
They don't notice because they are constantly looking in their wallets counting their own money. This is their primary interest and their attitudes and rhetoric are shaped around it. Worst of all, in my opinion, is the religious stuff that is used to mask financial self interest. I give you a line from a song in "1776" "Tisn't morals, 'tis money that saves."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bwestleyj
Not a Zero-Sum Gamer..
01:29 PM on 10/05/2010
I love it when I can fave and fan two people at once...iceage and isadora...you both are "on point"...as a former educator and board member, you are seriously preaching here today.