Task Force Offers Hope for N.J. Higher Education
Trenton Times
Darryl G. Greer, CEO, NJ Association of State Colleges & Universities
February 12, 2011
The recently released report of the Governor's Higher Education Task Force, chaired by former Gov. Tom Kean, offers citizens more hope for tying higher education to the state's future competitiveness and prosperity than any other study since the 1990s. Our association strongly endorses the report, recognizing that certain issues surrounding graduate medical/nursing education deserve further study.
Here are a few facts that explain why the report is so important at this time:
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Our nation and our state are falling behind the rest of the world in rate of student college completion, especially in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields. As of 2005, the U.S. ranked 12th among developed nations in the proportion of the population that has at least some post-secondary education, according to the Organization for Economic Development and Co-operation.
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Worldwide studies show that, for individuals, some college education is critical to competing and performing in the workplace and prospering in the 21st century.
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New Jersey remains among the top five states in the proportion of citizens who possess a college degree. However, according to a recent policy brief from the Lumina Foundation, the state should produce, by 2025, more than 760,000 additional associate or bachelor's degree graduates, beyond current degree production levels. Doing so would support President Obama's goal for national competitiveness.
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New Jersey spending on K-12 education is second-highest nationally, and New Jersey is a top state for high school graduates aspiring to attend college. Yet, the state ranks among the worst in four-year public college capacity per 1,000 population and has a deplorable rate of loss of college-bound high school graduates -- 30,000 annually. That's by far the biggest net loss among the 50 states.
The report carefully documents steps needed to achieve the goals of expanded college opportunity, affordability, quality improvement and accountability. Among the leading recommendations is the need for state investment to expand college opportunity. The state needs to stop slashing funding for higher education and begin investing in public colleges and universities by better and more consistently funding their operations and facilities.
Another crucial set of recommendations addresses the need for public colleges and universities to be free of state regulatory red tape in managing their affairs. College presidents need the tools to make strategic financial and personnel decisions to achieve quality and affordability goals for their institutions. For example, colleges and universities, especially with diminished state support for facilities renewal, must have the authority to build facilities more expeditiously through partnerships with private developers. In turn, college presidents should be accountable for these decisions, not primarily to the state government in Trenton, but to their nonpartisan volunteer boards of trustees, following Sarbanes-Oxley financial transparency best practices.
Student financial aid is another key area the task force examined. It surveyed the array of current programs, which include some of the most generous need-based aid programs in the nation. It concluded that successful programs, such as tuition aid grants and the Educational Opportunity Fund program, should be strengthened. It also advocated consolidating a hodgepodge of merit-based scholarship programs to better align them with student aspirations and other New Jersey and federal student aid programs to meet policy goals.
Another important recommendation pertains to the principle of "state mandate-state pay." The report found that it is unacceptable for the state to continue the practice of mandating spending at public colleges and universities without providing institutions the resources to pay the bill. At state colleges and universities, for example, this means freeing the colleges to negotiate labor contracts directly rather than having the state doing the negotiating but passing on the costs to colleges -- the current practice. Direct negotiation by the colleges would mean more college accountability for cost and performance.
Finally, the task force recommends new strategies and partnerships to make higher education an ongoing part of the state's economic and workforce development, recognizing that higher education is essential to job creation and long-term state prosperity.
The common thread among all these major policy
recommendations is preserving college opportunity,
quality and affordability for New jersey residents at a
time of urgent economic need and global competition for
educated workers.
The thoughtful, hard work of the task force provides New Jersey with a unique chance to regroup and lead the nation in aligning higher education with a broader state agenda that will benefit all citizens.
State officials higher education and business leaders as well as labor leaders can help by informing the public about the facts in the report and the challenges and opportunities ahead. Soon, the association plans to survey public opinion about the report's recommendations and share our findings. We believe the report deserves broad public attention, support and prompt action, and we trust that the public will agree.
Darryl G. Greer, Ph.D. is CEO of the New Jersey Association of State Colleges and Universities. Its member institutions are: The College of New Jersey, Kean University, Montclair State University, New Jersey City University, Ramapo College of New Jersey, Richard Stockton College, Rowan University, Thomas Edison State College, and William Paterson University.

