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Dateline: November
28,
2002
Program
seeks to boost college enrollment
By Roger Estlack,
Clarendon Enterprise
Clarendon
College joined other Texas colleges, universities, and state leaders this
month in launching an unprecedented statewide campaign, called College for
Texans, to encourage hundreds of thousands of additional people in Texas
to pursue higher education over the next decade and more.
CC
President Myles Shelton said the campaign has four major goals:
Participation, Success, Research, and Excellence. The later two are goals
for major universities, but the first two are goals for all colleges and
universities in the state.
“If
you look at the demographics in Texas between now and 2015, you see a
growing population which will participate at the same or lower percentage
in higher education,” Shelton said. “Texas is already lower than
California, New York, and Florida in terms of the percentage of our
population enrolled in college.”
The
campaign to increase college enrollment statewide was authorized by the
Texas Legislature last year and is directed by the Texas Higher Education
Coordinating Board.
“Although
more people than ever are enrolled in Texas colleges and universities, the
increases haven’t kept pace with the state’s population growth,
leaving Texas on a path to becoming a less educated, less prosperous
state,” said Commissioner of Higher Education Don Brown. “We must
close the gaps in student participation and success for all of the
state’s people, especially for low-income groups and people in regions
of the state with low college-going rates.”
As
higher education participation rates and educational attainment decline,
average annual household income is projected to fall by an estimated $30
billion to $40 billion statewide by 2030 – with dire effects for Texas
families and the state’s economy, according to demographers.
Shelton
says the future of the Texas economy is linked to citizens receiving
college training and job skills.
“If
we don’t increase participation in higher education, then we won’t
have a trained workforce, and there is a direct economic impact with not
having a trained workforce,” he said. “Those jobs will go somewhere
else.”
Only
23.3 percent of the population which is age 25 and older in Donley County
has earned a college degree, according to the 2000 US Census. Another 28.5
percent have some college but no degree.
Shelton
said surveys show that every dollar invested in a community college
education returns $9 in higher future earnings for the individual. Every
dollar invested by state and local governments in education returns $18
statewide.
A
survey commissioned by the Texas Association of Community Colleges
concluded that a better educated Texas could save $276.3 million in
improved health and in reduced welfare roles, lower unemployment, and less
crime.
Gov.
Rick Perry says getting a higher education is also tied to having more
opportunities in the future.
“An
educated Texan inherits a world of unlimited opportunity, and higher
education is critical to achieving higher aspirations,” said Perry.
“This campaign will help empower more young Texans to live their dreams
by teaching them how to prepare academically and financially for
college.”
College
for Texans will motivate primary and secondary students to prepare and aim
for college and ensure that colleges reach out to embrace those students.
The campaign will inspire parents, teachers, and communities to support
each child’s aspirations to prepare and enroll in post-secondary
education.
“It
starts in the public schools with making the college preparatory program
the standard program and recruiting and retaining qualified teachers,”
Shelton said.
College
for Texans is designed to give all people, especially families without any
higher education experience, information about the value of higher
education, the preparation needed to participate and succeed in college,
and ways to find financial aid or otherwise pay for college. The campaign
is aimed at helping bring 300,000 additional academically prepared people
– beyond the 200,000 additional students expected to enroll based on
current trends – into higher education by 2015.
“I
think the College for Texans plan is necessary for Texas and will benefit
Clarendon College,” Shelton said. “It’s necessary for us to have an
educated workforce. We’ve got to communicate to current and future
students that success in the future is going to be based on further
training beyond just a high school diploma.”
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