Subject: 1/4 LA Times
Commentary: Cuts to Student Outreach Threaten Universal Access
LOS ANGELES TIMES
ORANGE COUNTY
COMMENTARY
January 4, 2004
Commentary: Cuts to Student Outreach Threaten Universal
Access
By Manuel
Gomez
The recent death of University of California president emeritus
Clark Kerr makes me wistful about California's master plan for higher education,
a 40-year-old, doorstop-sized blueprint for the college and university education
of the state's students.
With visionary spirit, Kerr the master
plan's chief architect approached the daunting task of delivering
universal access to higher education while preserving the distinct and unique
missions of the community colleges, California State University and the
University of California systems.
As Kerr said in his autobiography, the
vision of the master plan was to "serve an egalitarian democracy, a technocratic
economy, and a meritocratic society," giving as many students as possible the
opportunity to attain a college education while promoting research,
professional, graduate and teacher training, and community education within the
different systems.
The master plan was constructed under intense and
roiling pressure created by a rapidly expanding college-age population and
rancorous competition among public colleges and universities.
Over the
years, the plan has been criticized for being many things: too hierarchical, too
rigid, too elitist, to name just a few. Nevertheless, the master plan presented
a model of cooperation among higher education institutions that was
unprecedented and unsurpassed in its scope and importance.
Make no
mistake: The master plan is still important. The most current version
2002 has been extended to include elementary and secondary education,
recognizing that public education should be a seamless pipeline from
kindergarten through a doctorate or professional degree. The basic vision
remains, however: universal educational opportunity and a shared commitment to
student achievement that is limited only by individual ambition.
Tragically, that vision is compromised every day in our schools,
colleges and universities. Many students do not have access to opportunities to
learn and achieve. Many lack textbooks, college preparatory courses and transfer
support. And many suffer from myriad conditions that undermine the learning
culture.
These problems have evolved since the drafting of the original
plan. And as California grows, diversifies, and struggles economically, those
problems can seem intrinsic and overwhelming.
But for almost as many
years as the master plan has guided us, our state's public colleges and
universities have been reaching out to the schools and institutes of higher
education on behalf of that promise of universal opportunity.
At the
University of California, those programs largely operated at the margins of the
mission until about five years ago, when the UC regents and Legislature
recognizing the enormous problem of educational disadvantage in California
pledged $38.5 million to school and university partnerships. Since then, we have
been building a comprehensive infrastructure of programs and relationships aimed
at raising student achievement across the state.
Much has been written
lately about the success of these programs. And despite the financial gutting
outreach has sustained over the last two years UC outreach efforts
currently constitute less than 1% of our budget the university has
continued to expand and deepen its relationship with public schools,
particularly the lowest-performing and least-supported.
But as Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger proposes immediate elimination of all outreach funding,
this important work is threatened with extinction.
Why should we care
about outreach? Perhaps because of the increasing disparities between affluent
and impoverished schools. Perhaps because income potential is largely predicted
by educational attainment. Perhaps because it's wiser to invest more in schools
now than in prisons later.
Perhaps, even, because the U.S. and California
constitutions guarantee equal educational opportunity.
That alone is
reason enough to preserve outreach. It is no more and no less than the most
basic means to achieving "egalitarian democracy, a technocratic economy, and a
meritocratic society."
Sometimes it is difficult to keep our promises.
But supporting education must be more than an empty campaign pledge; it is a
promise that will mark the difference between democracy and
catastrophe.
Manuel Gomez is vice chancellor of student affairs at UC
Irvine and served as the systemwide vice president for educational outreach
under former UC President Richard C. Atkinson.Back -
CSU Fresno MESA - MESA Statewide