INDIANAPOLIS —
Indiana higher-education policy makers are getting ready to adopt an aggressive college-completion plan that will push the state’s colleges and universities to reel in their rising costs and dramatically improve their graduation rates.
The plan sets the goal of increasing the percent of Hoosiers with post-secondary degrees to 60 percent by 2025 — nearly doubling the current rate.
To get there, the plan calls for the state’s universities to set specific targets for graduating students on time, decreasing the student debt load, and accelerating degree programs that match the state’s workforce needs.
Some university presidents are already balking at the plan’s goal and directives which are set to be adopted by the Indiana Commission for Higher Education. But Teresa Lubbers, who heads the commission, said the plan is needed to pull Indiana up to where it needs to be to fill a void in the state’s human capital.
“We are digging ourselves out of very big hole,” Lubbers told a group of university officials who saw a preview of the plan Tuesday. “We need aggressive goals.”
Driving the plan are some dismal numbers: Indiana ranks 42nd in the nation for college graduates and third in the nation for student loan defaults. Meanwhile, the state’s four-year universities graduate less than one-third of their students on time, but have increased their tuition and fees by more than 100 percent over the past decade.
Indiana’s low college-graduation rate puts Indiana in peril; the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that more than half the job vacancies by 2018 will require someone with a college degree or other post-secondary credentials.
The plan to reverse that course, dubbed “Reaching Higher, Achieving More,” offers some specific remedies to counter those numbers.
For example, the plan calls on universities to set annual targets for improving the cost-per-degree ratio at their campuses; to streamline some four-year degrees into three-year degrees; and to publicly release information on their graduates’ job placement rates and earnings.
Lubbers previewed the plan at a meeting of the Indiana College Completion Council, a new organization made up of the state’s public, private, and for-profit universities and colleges.
While some council members, including Indiana State University President Dan Bradley, questioned whether the 60 percent college-degree rate was attainable by 2025, other university presidents seemed to question the premise on which the plan was built.
University of Southern Indiana President Linda Bennett said USI students don’t see graduating on time as a priority.
Ball State University President Jo Ann Gora said she didn’t think it was “appropriate” for the state’s universities to push their students to pursue math and science degrees that are already in high demand in the workplace. She also said she wanted to the commission to do more to convince parents that Indiana’s average student debt load of $27,000 isn’t exorbitant.
Other university officials at the meeting blamed the state’s K-12 schools, saying students were coming to college ill-prepared to do the work.
The plan is prescriptive but with limited clout. The Commission for Higher Education can’t force the state’s universities to adopt the plan’s goals. But the commission does recommend funding levels for the state’s public universities, and the state legislature has adopted a funding formula that ties some higher-education dollars to meeting the commission’s goals.
Local News
Plan targets college completion
- Local News
-
-
Police probe possible fatal crash near Bristol
Elkhart County rescue crews responded to a possible double fatal traffic crash on Ind. 15 just south of C.R. 112 at 9:13 p.m. Friday night. Ind. 15 was closed to non-emergency traffic and a Samaritan medical helicopter landed at the scene to assist with rescue efforts.
-
Goshen teen who shot himself Tuesday arrested for using sawed-off gun in robbery
A 17-year-old male recently admitted to IU Health Goshen Hospital for a self-inflicted gunshot wound has been arrested in connection with the robbery of a BP gas station in Goshen this past Sunday.
-
Wild phlox can be found this time of year
Nature’s bounty can sometimes produce unexpected beauty in the form of wildflowers that can pop up anywhere and everywhere. They can be some of the most exhilarating because of the unusual colors, the delicacy of the blossoms, or simply their choice of location to grow.
-
Rinker Foundation donates $5,000 for new ‘learning’ toys
SYRACUSE — The kids are happy. The teachers are excited. The director is pleased. Best of all, at Lakeland Learning Center is using new educational toys to prepare preschoolers to hit the ground running in kindergarten.
-
Syracuse town manager says changes can be difficult
SYRACUSE — Local residents want to know when the piers will be put in for those who swim near the Oakwood Inn. Other concerns revolve around trees on the property, the new waste management and water bills being sent since the town annexed the area several months ago.
-
DeFries Gardens to host annual art show
The third annual DeFries Gardens, “In the Garden,” Juried Art Show, will take place June 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at DeFries Garden, 17477 CR 46, New Paris.
-
Residents want to see Oakwood revitalized, but how?
SYRACUSE — The receivership status of the Oakwood Inn property in Syracuse expired in April. On Friday, the Kosciuscko County Superior Court I granted that Ian Rolland will continue as the receiver.
-
Goshen grad takes jazz overseas with BSU ensemble
GOSHEN — A Goshen High School graduate feels his recent jazz music tour to China helped him grow as a musician and as a person.
-
City planning to reroof Rogers pavilion
GOSHEN — The historic Rogers Park pavilion that was damaged in an arson fire March 21 will be repaired if zoning and state permits are obtained.
-
Man pleads guilty to robbery
GOSHEN — A Nappanee man pleaded guilty in Elkhart County Circuit Court to his involvement in a March robbery in Nappanee.
- More Local News Headlines
-



