The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation this week announced a new institutional goal with potentially wide-ranging repercussions for higher education: to more than double the proportion of low-income young adults who earn a college credential or degree by age 26, and to accomplish that by 2025.
The effort, which would increase the number of postsecondary graduates by more than 250,000 each year, was announced at a meeting of educators convened in Seattle鈥攖he foundation鈥檚 home base鈥攁long with other plans to revamp the education efforts of the grantmaking colossus.
鈥淔or the last 40 years, the U.S. has been encouraging enrollment and access,鈥 foundation co-chair Melinda Gates told the gathering. 鈥淏ut the payoff doesn鈥檛 come with enrolling in college; the payoff comes when a student gets a postsecondary degree that helps them get a job with a family wage鈥攁nd that鈥檚 not happening nearly enough.鈥
The foundation cited figures showing that only about half of U.S. college students graduate within six years, with the rate for African-American and Hispanic students closer to 20 percent.
鈥淥ur foundation has a vision of a thriving postsecondary market of community colleges, four-year colleges, online options, and for-profit institutions that would compete for students on the basis of price, value, and convenience鈥攚ith a premium paid when a student completes a degree that means something in the workplace,鈥 said Ms. Gates, who co-chairs the foundation with her husband, Bill Gates, who dropped out of college to co-found the Microsoft Corp.
Details of the plan are scarce so far. Foundation spokeswoman Marie Groark said the first set of grants will be announced in early December, but declined to project a total dollar value for the new endeavor, which aims to lift the proportion of low-income young adults with a postsecondary credential from 25 percent to 60 percent. 鈥淎ll we can say is that our giving over the last eight years in education ($4 billion) is a good estimate of what we鈥檒l spend moving forward,鈥 Ms. Groark said in an e-mail.
Ms. Gates said that 鈥渋n the next several years, our work will focus on two-year colleges.鈥
A strategy document released by the foundation said early investments will support improvements in remedial education, 鈥渄ramatically accelerating the rate of academic catch-up for poorly prepared young students.鈥
Mixed Reactions
Hilary Pennington, the foundation鈥檚 director of special initiatives and the co-founder of Jobs for the Future, a Boston-based research and policy-development organization, told educators in a separate speech: 鈥淸W]e will invest in networks of colleges, employers, and youth-serving organizations, rather than individual programs. ... We will invest in a handful of states and communities based on their concentration of our target population and their political commitment and capacity to move this agenda and reach our goal.鈥
Michelle Asha Cooper, the president of the Washington-based Institute for Higher Education Policy, a nonprofit research organization, applauded the initiative鈥檚 goal as 鈥渢imely and appropriate鈥 and said she hopes it would 鈥渉elp the higher education community address crucial questions and tackle persistent challenges.鈥
Lawrence Mishel, the president of the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank, called the initiative鈥檚 goal 鈥渁 great aspiration.鈥
鈥淯nfortunately, this effort is coming at a time when the demand for college graduates is growing at the slowest rate in six decades, and that was before the current financial meltdown,鈥 he said in an e-mail. 鈥淚t seems to me to be equally important to make sure that the 69 percent of the workforce without college degrees has access to good-paying jobs.鈥
Kati Haycock, the director of the Washington-based research and advocacy organization Education Trust, said: 鈥淭his decision to go after, to really focus on community colleges is a huge mistake in my judgment 鈥 because it鈥檚 the most broken part of the system.鈥
鈥淚f you ask me what we should do [to help] poor kids, get more of them into four-year colleges,鈥 she added.
George Boggs, the president and chief executive officer of the American Association of Community Colleges, based in Washington, said he welcomed the foundation鈥檚 interest in community colleges, and called its goal 鈥渁chievable.鈥 He disputed Ms. Haycock鈥檚 characterization of community colleges, but acknowledged that 鈥渢he truth is we really still need to do a better job鈥 in enrolling and keeping students on track.