Published
4 years agoon
Two years ago, the state board that oversees California’s 114 community colleges and its new chancellor, Eloy Ortiz Oakley, launched an ambitious effort to improve student outcomes, especially by increasing the numbers of associate degrees and transfers to four-year colleges.
The goals include a 20 percent increase in degrees or some other professional credentials and a 35 percent gain in transfers to four-year colleges, but degree awards increased by less than one percent in 2017-18, he said.
As Oakley, et al, ramp up pressure on local colleges to meet the plan’s ambitious goals, a sharp-elbow squabble has developed over the data used to chart progress, or lack thereof.
In the wake of Oakley’s “disappointing” report, local college officials are complaining that his data are faulty because numbers from different databases are being combined in ways that don’t reflect reality.
One March 28 email from a member of the Community College “Research and Planning Group,” Erik Cooper of Sierra College, complained that the methodology being used “has led to hundreds of emails from dozens of researchers, almost as many behind the scenes emails, numerous phone calls and some pretty bent feelings and frustrations that are … eroding confidence.”
Cooper, speaking for many other officials, added, “Chancellor Oakley in several recent publications has noted that the (community colleges) haven’t made progress on his Vision for Success goals. Colleges are being shamed … we are being asked what’s going on and how to improve … repeatedly walking back data and being held accountable for something that is out of our control. We have to have confidence that this work is accurate and reliable.”
“The math doesn’t make sense,” Marybeth Buechner of Los Rios Community College District said in another of many critical emails, adding, “The current … procedure gives us a graduation percent that is so low as to not really make sense.”
Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He has written more than 9,000 columns about the state and its politics and is the founding editor of the “California Political Almanac.” Dan has also been a frequent guest on national television news shows, commenting on California issues and policies.
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