I was thinking back to our discussion in class on how maybe we hand out too many degrees or whether or not we enable too many students to go forward in higher education when they shouldn't. I think this is ridiculous. While not every student may succeed in higher education (like I will probably never be a good enough skier to attempt double black diamond runs*), shouldn't we, as educators, strive to at least help encourage a student to try something a little more difficult. If it is true that we learn more from our failures than successes, what do we have to lose? The community colleges are a great starting place. They are sort of like the green ski runs at the bottom of the mountain. We wouldn't take someone unfamiliar with skiing (education) to the top of the mountain (tier one research university) and just shove them off onto a double black diamond run; however, we often times expect students to do the same. And, if they don't succeed we tell them that maybe "college isn't right for them... I mean, not everybody needs a higher education." Yet, there exists a certain snobbery about the community college at many tier one research universities. Why is this?
Education, like sports, often takes practice. Not everyone is born a good student like not everyone is born athletic. We do not tell kids to stop playing baseball if they strike out the first time on the field. In fact, many professional players get paid millions and still strike out more often than they score a home run. The community colleges offer smaller courses (typically) with more teacher student interaction at a lower cost. In fact, there are many states that will guarantee acceptance to a four year university if a student completes two years at community college. With 1 in 4 freshman dropping out of college (Whitborne, 2002, available at: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0BTR/is_4_22/ai_84599442/), the problem is epidemic. Maybe higher education is like those double black diamond ski runs... the only difference is that we expect students to jump from the baby hill up to the top of the mountain without encouraging them to try some blue runs first.
*FYI... in case anyone out there is unfamiliar with skiing... ski runs are labeled according to skill level required to get down:
Green - Easiest
Double Green - Moderate
Blue - Intermediate
Double Blue - Moderately Hard
Black Diamond - Difficult
Double Black Diamond - Expert
Excerpt from Whitborne, 2002:
"A large number of students are ill-equipped for the challenges of college," says Vincent Tinto, chair of the Higher Education Program at Syracuse University in New York, and author of Leaving College: Rethinking the Causes and Cures of Student Attrition (University of Chicago Press). Tinto says students devote so much time to the admissions process, they forget to focus on what lies ahead: challenging academics, living away from home, maintaining their finances, learning time management skills, and taking responsibility for their own lives.
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