Friday, November 11, 2011

Regents Approve College Completion Plan

Acting on a charge from Gov. Nathan Deal, the Board of Regents approved a draft plan that commits the University System’s 35 institutions to increase college completion. The plan also outlines a new agreement with the Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG) aimed at improving students’ ability to move between the two systems and earn degrees.

Acting on a charge from Gov. Nathan Deal, the Board of Regents approved  a draft plan that commits the University System’s 35 institutions to increase college completion. The plan also outlines a new agreement with the Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG) aimed at improving students’ ability to move between the two systems and earn degrees.The regents action follows Gov. Deal’s August announcement that Georgia was named one of ten states selected to receive funding through Complete College America, a national organization focused on increasing the nation’s college completion rate through state policy change, and to build consensus for change among state leaders, higher education, and the national education policy community.

At that announcement, Deal said that the funding would help springboard his Complete College Georgia Initiative. “I want to commend our University and Technical College Systems for the work they have done to create exceptional learning environments,” Deal said. “One way we can further leverage our educational assets to make Georgia more competitive is by increasing college completion rates.”

The regents’ action today is one of the initial steps that must be taken to enact Gov. Deal’s initiative.

This plan seeks to address statistics that show that currently in Georgia, approximately 42 percent of young adults hold a certificate, associate’s degree, bachelor’s degree or higher. Yet studies project that by 2020, 60 percent of all jobs will require some form of postsecondary education.

“Because the gap is so wide, we have to think bigger; we have to use multiple strategies to attract, retain and graduate significantly more Georgians from among both traditional and non-traditional populations,” said USG Chancellor Hank Huckaby.

The plan, adopted by the regents in the form of a report, “Complete College Georgia,” is a joint project of both the USG and TCSG. It must still be approved by the TCSG board and then submitted to the governor’s office.

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