ATD, association for talent development

ATD Blog

US Chamber Report Makes Case for Higher Education Reform

By

Sun Jun 24 2012

Loading...

Content

The Institute for a Competitive Workforce (ICW), an affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce recently released the third edition of its Leaders and Laggards series, A State-by-State Report Card on Public Postsecondary Education. The report examines public colleges and universities in all 50 states, including four-year and two-year institutions, and is designed to provide an in-depth evaluation of data and a careful analysis of postsecondary performance and policy across states.

The Institute for a Competitive Workforce (ICW), an affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce recently released the third edition of its Leaders and Laggards series, A State-by-State Report Card on Public Postsecondary Education. The report examines public colleges and universities in all 50 states, including four-year and two-year institutions, and is designed to provide an in-depth evaluation of data and a careful analysis of postsecondary performance and policy across states. 

Content

“With tuition growing, debt loads increasing, students questioning the marketplace value of their degrees, and large amounts of taxpayer dollars invested, the business community and the public are starting to ask questions of policymakers and higher education leaders,” said President of ICW and former U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings. “This report begins to look at how states are doing in preparing students for jobs after college and the value state taxpayers are getting in meeting the demands of local economies and employers.”

“With tuition growing, debt loads increasing, students questioning the marketplace value of their degrees, and large amounts of taxpayer dollars invested, the business community and the public are starting to ask questions of policymakers and higher education leaders,” said President of ICW and former U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings. “This report begins to look at how states are doing in preparing students for jobs after college and the value state taxpayers are getting in meeting the demands of local economies and employers.” 

Content

For the first time, Leaders and Laggards grades postsecondary institutions in the following six areas:

For the first time, Leaders and Laggards grades postsecondary institutions in the following six areas: 

  1. Content

    student access and success

    student access and success

  2. Content

    efficiency and cost-effectiveness

    efficiency and cost-effectiveness

  3. Content

    meeting labor market demand

    meeting labor market demand

  4. Content

    transparency and accountability

    transparency and accountability

  5. Content

    policy environment

    policy environment

  6. Content

    innovation

    innovation

Content

The findings are sobering. Statewide completion rates at four-year public colleges typically hover around 50 percent and attrition is costly at a time when public and private resources are scarce. In fact, 33 states spend more than $50,000 in education and related expenses to produce a credential at a two-year college. In addition, while the need for skilled workers with high-quality postsecondary training has never been higher, most states have not developed the means to measure the quality of their programs—just 22 states have the ability to track the success of graduates once they enter the labor force and make those data public. Only four states allow students and taxpayers to compare labor market outcomes across both institutions and programs.

The findings are sobering. Statewide completion rates at four-year public colleges typically hover around 50 percent and attrition is costly at a time when public and private resources are scarce. In fact, 33 states spend more than $50,000 in education and related expenses to produce a credential at a two-year college. In addition, while the need for skilled workers with high-quality postsecondary training has never been higher, most states have not developed the means to measure the quality of their programs—just 22 states have the ability to track the success of graduates once they enter the labor force and make those data public. Only four states allow students and taxpayers to compare labor market outcomes across both institutions and programs. 

Content

However, the news is not all troubling. Several states including Florida, Texas, and Minnesota have emerged as national leaders on certain measures. This is not just a story of the “best” higher education systems getting better. Some of the most innovative policy agendas have developed in states with low rates of student success, which is heartening evidence that policymakers and postsecondary leaders are actively and intentionally confronting the challenges they face.

However, the news is not all troubling. Several states including Florida, Texas, and Minnesota have emerged as national leaders on certain measures. This is not just a story of the “best” higher education systems getting better. Some of the most innovative policy agendas have developed in states with low rates of student success, which is heartening evidence that policymakers and postsecondary leaders are actively and intentionally confronting the challenges they face. 

Content

 

Content

 

Content

“I think the results help illuminate that some state systems are doing a far better job of graduating students with the dollars they’re spending, and that too few states are providing students, families, and taxpayers with the information they need to make good choices or hold higher education institutions accountable,” added Rick Hess, Director of Education Policy Studies for the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), which conducted research for the report. “With tuition rising at three times the rate of inflation, we want to work with the business community to ensure that students who invest in their education learn the knowledge and skills necessary to enter an increasingly competitive global workforce.”

“I think the results help illuminate that some state systems are doing a far better job of graduating students with the dollars they’re spending, and that too few states are providing students, families, and taxpayers with the information they need to make good choices or hold higher education institutions accountable,” added Rick Hess, Director of Education Policy Studies for the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), which conducted research for the report. “With tuition rising at three times the rate of inflation, we want to work with the business community to ensure that students who invest in their education learn the knowledge and skills necessary to enter an increasingly competitive global workforce.” 

Content

The Chamber is urging policy makers, the business community, and educators to craft a reform agenda that promotes transparency to the public, demands better data on performance and improved measurement of student outcomes.

The Chamber is urging policy makers, the business community, and educators to craft a reform agenda that promotes transparency to the public, demands better data on performance and improved measurement of student outcomes.   

Content

To view the report and compare state results online, visit the ICW website .

To view the report and compare state results online, visit the ICW website.

You've Reached ATD Member-only Content

Become an ATD member to continue

Already a member?Sign In


Copyright © 2026 ATD

ASTD changed its name to ATD to meet the growing needs of a dynamic, global profession.

Terms of UsePrivacy NoticeCookie Policy