The UW North branch campus never made any sense and the last ditch attempt by representatives Dunshee and Sells to make the campus law, without funding, location or time table is laughable. How is this sensible (Sunday, March 9th)?
We have 6 primary university campuses (plus many branch locations) serving the needs of traditional students yet we see dropout rates approaching 50% at some schools. Studies, including A Test of Leadership by the Secretary of Education, show that finances and preparation are 2 of our biggest barriers to college success, not geographic proximity. Further, we see that online and blended education models are booming, making place unimportant. Unless, of course, your goal is construction spending.
We can deliver post-secondary education in the tri-county area at a fraction of the cost of a new campus. I would ask local legislators to give up UW North and commit themselves to breaking down barriers to education in 2008. Go to Bellingham, Ellensburg and Cheney and talk to their Presidents. They offer several bachelor and master degree programs locally now, but find out how the legislature can help to expand them further. Find out how we can speed up articulation agreements and fund development of effective online coursework. Go to Everett CC's University Center for North Puget Sound and see what they need to expand. We have plenty of campuses, what we need now is to make the pieces of the system to work together.
Building a 1960's university won't benefit generations of Snohomish County citizens, but it will saddle them with a mountain of debt. We want increased education opportunity now, not a new campus 20 years from now.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Is that sensible (edited for space)?
Well it appears that my proposed letter to the editor came in around 80 words too many (it was very nice of them to let me know and give me a chance to edit it). Instead of modifying the original post, I'm showing here as its own posting. Enjoy.