House Democrats yesterday introduced their vision for upgrading our nation’s higher education system, the College Affordability Act (CAA). We applaud the House for proposing solutions to many critical issues in higher education. But, ultimately, we would prefer to see a more far-reaching overhaul of the Higher Education Act. Today’s students and the U.S. economy demand it.
JFF is pleased that the bill, introduced by Rep. Bobby Scott, chair of the House Committee on Education and Labor, includes a number of provisions that promise to better meet the needs of today’s students. These include:
- A new federal-state partnership that would encourage statewide, evidence-based reforms
- A new program that expands opportunities for students to earn college credit in high school
- An end to the ban on a federal data system for tracking students across their education and workforce experiences, and the establishment of new requirements for collecting student outcomes data on college transfers, employment, and earnings
- Incorporation of student completion and workforce outcomes in accreditation decisions
- Updates to the federal work-study program to better support low-income students
- An expansion of the Pell Grant program that allows grants to be used for quality, short-term courses
- New programs to support stronger navigation and wraparound services to keep students in college and on track toward completion
Congress could strengthen the CAA by detailing the evidence-based reforms that JFF has previously urged policymakers to include in any proposed federal-state partnership. These include innovations seeded through the TAACCCT program (e.g., implementation of credit for prior learning and competency-based education) and other evidence-based initiatives, including college in high school programs, career pathways, and sector-focused initiatives. The bill could also be strengthened with work-study reforms that focus on high-quality, relevant work-based learning experiences, including apprenticeships.