A new report from Public Agenda adds an important new voice to the conversation about higher education reform. "Still on the Sidelines" explores the potential of trustees of colleges and universities to be significant change agents in higher education. While a small minority of trustees we talked to was passionate about broad, fundamental change, the majority see their role as a supportive one, helping the president lead their institution in challenging times without entertaining significant change in the status quo.
Research Studies: Education
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Still On The Sidelines: A Public Agenda report for the Lumina Foundation

What's Trust Got To Do With It?: A Communications and Engagement Guide for School Leaders Tackling the Problem of Persistently Failing Schools

Too many students are languishing in schools that, for whatever reason, fail to meet their needs and help them meet their potential. The dilemma is even more acute because the boldest reforms to transform these schools often provoke angry, prolonged public opposition. Public Agenda's latest report offers a critical resource for leaders seeking to transform the nation's persistently failing schools.
One Degree of Separation: How Young Americans Who Don't Finish College See Their Chances for Success

Changing the Conversation About Productivity: Strategies for Engaging Faculty and Institutional Leaders:

This report, by our Public Engagement team for the Lumina Foundation's Higher Education Productivity Initiative, builds on and extends Public Agenda's ongoing research on attitudes toward higher education reform.
Can I Get A Little Advice Here?: How An Overstretched High School Guidance System Is Undermining Students' College Aspirations

Based on a national survey of young adults ages 22 to 30, Can I Get A Little Advice Here? asks young Americans how much help they received from the high school guidance system when it comes to choosing a college or career or getting financial aid for college. In too many cases, young people tell us, the answer is "not much."
Squeeze Play 2010: Continued Public Anxiety On Cost, Harsher Judgments On How Colleges Are Run

With Their Whole Lives Ahead of Them:

Thank you for assembling a valuable data set on a critical topic- retention. I have been activley involved in this area for the past 15 years and would like to ask if your raw data are available for additional collaborative study. Specifically, by grouping all of the subsectors of postsecondary education together we lose some valuable insights. What I would like to either do my self or suggest that you do is to separate the data first between public community colleges and public four year universities. I have done this in Florida and the results are very different and thus the strategies to improve are also. It is my experience that the strategies for success are very different for community college students than they are for university students.
Supporting Teacher Talent: The View From Generation Y

Is there evidence that teacher "talent" (“performance”, “intellect”, “motivation” or whatever vague metric you want to use) has declined or become more erratically distributed over the last century? Would providing teachers incomes that are a significant percentage of the incomes of Wall Street traders make a difference to student learning? While the Education profession has not attracted the best and the brightest in the population it is not clear to me that programs that seek to do so or at least financially reward “talent” will make a difference. Could it be that the failures of American Education are more the result of changes in American society? In the 1950s and 1960, for example, when America was striving to compete with the USSR militarily, technologically, scientifically and culturally intellectual interest in each of these areas was encouraged and funded. Kids were given chemistry, electronic and erector sets as toys not Legos and action computer games with mindless themes. I remember going to the chemical supply houses to buy chemicals, glassware (beakers, test tubes, flasks, etc.) and other equipment to conduct experiments as well as making bombs for which nowadays a kid would be put in prison. Bill Hewlett of Hewlett Packard grew up doing the same thing including making rockets. The shift from a manufacturing economy to a consumer economy paralleled a shift in status from what you invented, were interested in or made to what you consume. As kids have become the targets of all manner of consumer goods companies their intellectual interests have been subverted or perverted. Distractions have multiplied. For example, cell phones, Twitter and FaceBook are not only bottomless distractions that can consume a kid’s waking hours they are addictions that impede successful Education. Nel Noddings, the philosopher of Education (and education) points out that kids need caring to learn and develop as moral human beings yet that is precisely what American society based as it is on corrosive individualism, social Darwinism and market fundamentalism discounts.
Teaching for a Living: How Teachers See the Profession Today

Campus Commons?: What Faculty, Financial Officers and Others Think About Controlling College Costs

Squeeze Play 2009: The Public’s Views on College Costs Today

The Iron Triangle: College Presidents Talk about Costs, Access, and Quality

Sharing the Dream: How Faculty, Families and Community Leaders Respond to Community College Reform

Squeeze Play 2008: How Parents and the Public Look at Higher Education Today

Life After High School: Young People Talk about Their Hopes and Prospects

Especially I truly enjoyed your collection of such fascinating with natural situation regarding the expectation and Prospects of parents from their kids.Reporting each and every moment of life after school is so impressively written here that will definitely help them to face all situation.PowerSchool Services
Public Attitudes on Higher Education: A Trend Analysis, 1993 to 2003

Meeting the Competition: College and University Presidents, Faculty, and State Legislators View the New Competitive Academic Arena

Great Expectations: How the Public and Parents -- White, African American and Hispanic -- View Higher Education

Doing Comparatively Well: Why the Public Loves Higher Education and Criticizes K-12

Taking Responsibility: Leaders' Expectations of Higher Education

The Price of Admission: The Growing Importance of Higher Education

Enduring Values, Changing Concerns: What Californians Expect From Their Higher Education System

Preserving the Higher Education Legacy: A Conversation with California Leaders

The Closing Gateway: Californians Consider Their Higher Education System












I graduated from high school in 2004 from a school near Cleveland, Ohio. After high school, I went on to college in which I graduated in 2008. My high school lacked the guidance for college bound studebts in that I can not remember if my high school had a guidance counselor or if such a person exists. High schools need to put more effort into the type of people hired to help students with college choices and less effort on sports, theatre/arts and other extracurricular activities that will not benefit students if they do not choose the right college. Overall, guidance counselors are an important part of the transition to college and they serve as an inspirational role for young adults moving forward to the next level of their lives.