CCRC'S NEW NATIONAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION IS FEATURED IN 'INSIDE HIGHER ED'

By: Doug Lederman — Inside Higher Ed (July 11, 2006)

Inside Higher Ed is the first publication to announce that the U.S. Department of Education is establishing a new national research center to be housed at CCRC. In the article, “Research on Higher Ed Gets a Boost,” Editor Doug Lederman writes:


At a time of great fulmination about the future of American higher education and colleges’ ability to successfully educate the country’s growing numbers of low-income and academically underprepared citizens, the U.S. Education Department is establishing a new national research center to study just those topics.

The National Research and Development Center on Postsecondary Education, which will be housed at the Community College Research Center at Columbia University’s Teachers College, will be the nation’s only federally funded research center on higher education. It is sponsored by the Institute for Education Sciences, which is providing $9.8 million over five years to establish the new center, one of several it is creating. (The others deal with early childhood education and development, gifted and talented education, and local and state policy.) The Columbia center’s partners are MDRC, the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia, and professors at Harvard University and Princeton University.

The institute’s predecessor, the Office for Educational Research and Improvement, had its own research center, the National Center for Postsecondary Improvement at Stanford University, which shut its doors in 2004.

The new center will focus on efforts by two- and four-year institutions to bolster students’ access to higher education and improve the rates at which they earn a degree…The new center will examine a range of topics, including dual enrollment programs, which enroll high school students in college courses; remediation; learning communities for low-skill students; and financial aid policies and state incentives or sanctions to promote low-income, low-skilled students.



Read the full-length Inside Higher Ed article at: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2006/07/11/edresearch

Read the press release for the Center at:
http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/Publication.asp?UID=428


Copyright 2009 Community College Research Center, Institute on Education and the Economy, Teachers College, Columbia University. All rights reserved.
Box 174 * 525 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027 * TEL: 212.678.3091 * FAX: 212.678.3699 * ccrc@columbia.edu