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Quick Takes: Reducing Community College Remediation, Minimal Progress on Science, Princeton's Study Abroad Pilot, Rangel's Fund Raising, Test-Posting Web Site Changes Rules, $4.2M Settlement in Hazing Death, JFK U. to Merge With National, Fear of Texas

July 16, 2008

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  • Community colleges in California might be able to significantly reduce the need for remedial education among students by using the results of 11th grade state testing to better direct students prior to enrollment, says a new report from the California Partnership for Achieving Student Success, known as Cal-PASS. California State University campuses have had success in reducing the need for remediation by using high school results to show students very specifically what they need to do to be college-ready by the time they leave high school, and the report says community colleges could have similar results.
  • The United States is making minimal progress at doubling bachelor's degree production in science and technology fields from 2005 to 2015, according to a progress report issued Tuesday by the Business Roundtable. That group, along with other business organizations, set the goal as part of the "Tapping America's Potential" program, but the update found that bachelor's degree production in science and technology fields appears to be relatively flat.
  • Princeton University is moving ahead with an idea, first floated in February, of sending some newly accepted students to perform public service outside their home countries prior to their enrollment. The university announced Tuesday that a pilot version of the program would start as early as fall of 2009, initially with 20 students. The program will be tuition free.
  • Rep. Charles B. Rangel, a New York Democrat who as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee is among the most powerful members of Congress, sent fund-raising letters on his Congressional letterhead to wealthy people whose businesses his panel reviews, seeking donations for a center to be named for Rangel at City College of the City University of New York, The Washington Post reported. Rangel has also worked to secure Congressional earmarks for the center.
  • PostYourTest.com, a new Web site that allows students to submit tests and exams for others to download, has suspended a service that allowed professors to ban students from uploading their materials. As the “banned list” is no longer accepting new professors, there is no longer a preemptive method for instructors to stop their students from uploading materials to the site. While all professors currently on the “banned list” will have their prior wishes honored, new users who wish to have content removed will have to follow the Web site’s regular content removal protocol. According to the Web site's founder, Demir Oral, about 20 to 30 percent of the requests for inclusion on the “banned list” were completed improperly. Some users, for example, could not be properly identified or did not use a valid “.edu” e-mail address per instructions. Oral said the Web site needed something with more “structure” to take the job of the “banned list.” Now, all content removal requests must meet the stipulations of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. “This is just a technicality,” said Oral, who once touted the “banned list” among his defenses of the Web site and its purpose. “Tests quickly get taken down, typically within one or two days. We wanted to have something that could be respected and not necessarily debated.”
  • The family of a University of Texas at Austin freshman who died of alcohol poisoning in 2005 at a fraternity event for pledges has agreed to accept a $4.2 million settlement for a suit against Lambda Phi Epsilon and some of its members, The Houston Chronicle reported. Some of the funds will be used for a video on the dangers of binge drinking.
  • John F. Kennedy University -- facing declining enrollments and increased competition -- plans to merge into National University, The Contra Costa Times reported. Both institutions are private and based in California.
  • British authors and universities are afraid that the University of Texas at Austin is outbidding British archives for the collections of many of the country's writers. The Guardian quoted an author who sold Texas a collection after being offered 10 times what a British university proposed. "Stuff is bleeding out of this country. I'm obviously flattered to have this interest from America, but I'm hardly the only British writer there," he said, adding that when he was at Texas, "I held Blake paintings and Coleridge notebooks in my hand. I couldn't help thinking that they didn't belong there." A British archivist is quoted as saying: "Two things are inevitable: death and Texas."
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Comments on Quick Takes: Reducing Community College Remediation, Minimal Progress on Science, Princeton's Study Abroad Pilot, Rangel's Fund Raising, Test-Posting Web Site Changes Rules, $4.2M Settlement in Hazing Death, JFK U. to Merge With National, Fear of Texas

  • Rangel
  • Posted by John B. on July 16, 2008 at 8:55am EDT
  • Measured by any reasonable ethical, legal, or proprietary standards (excepting double standards, of course), Rangel's actions should result in his dismissal from Congress - either by resignation, impeachment, or recall. However, Rangel will not only retain his seat, but he will be protected and defended by both the media, is constituents, and his party. Anyone care to run the gauntlet and explain why this will be so?

  • Posted by R.J. Leavey on July 16, 2008 at 9:35am EDT
  • I'll bite, John. I'm guessing it's because Congresspeople see themselves as a group constantly under attack. They are powerful and enjoy exercising that privledge. They all know that it could easily be them, so their sympathies are engaged, and likely most of them don't feel their own records would bear up to public scrutiny if they led the charge. Their natural instinct, no matter what party they belong to, is to protect their in-group and it all leads to gymnastic feats of justification. Ugly, but true. However, I would note that I'd expect this same behavior in many different types of groups. Given some of the things we justify and the things that are going on, I find it hard to get too worked up over this one (and I'm an Independent, so it isn't about political loyalty). Maybe I'm growing a bit too cynical.

  • Thanks
  • Posted by phyllis on July 16, 2008 at 9:35am EDT
  • Thanks for random act of British humor.

  • TEXAS
  • Posted by JPS on July 16, 2008 at 9:40am EDT
  • If the U.K. (or any other country) truly, genuinely believes in protecting its history, then the country should pony up the funds to do it. Whatever universities in my home state of Texas or anywhere else do shouldn't play into the decision. If a world-renowned institution like UT-Austin has the desire and the ability to archive great works; the commitment to making them available to any scholar; and the funding to compete effectively to acquire them, so be it. I completely understand that these works are the U.K.'s "children" and it's hard to see your kids leave the nest -- but if you don't want them to leave, make it worthwhile for them to stay.

  • Bipartisan agreement?
  • Posted by Andy on July 16, 2008 at 9:50am EDT
  • John, as a Democrat I'm right there with you. The conflict of interest apparent in the Rangel fundraising issue should produce scandal and outrage. Additionally, CUNY should look very carefully into the role it played in this venture and whether it should move forward with a Rangel Center.

  • Don't belogn there either
  • Posted by Bob on July 16, 2008 at 9:50am EDT
  • "'I held Blake paintings and Coleridge notebooks in my hand. I couldn’t help thinking that they didn’t belong there.' A British archivist is quoted as saying".

    When I visit the British Museum, I feel the same. Most of the things held by that museum do not belong there.

  • Economic reductionism
  • Posted by Keynes on July 16, 2008 at 10:05am EDT
  • That's all well and good, JPS, if the market is the ultimate value and everyone has the same amount of money in the bank. I'm sure you won't object if sometime in the future China or Saudi Arabia buy off Graceland or Monticello because we're too busy trying to rebuild our highways. If it mattered, we'd shift our priorities, wouldn't we? That, for example, is a great explanation for why poor people don't own nice homes. Rotten priorities.

    When will we wake up from this "one dollar, one vote" nightmare our country has thrust itself into?

  • Must be a typo
  • Posted by Abbott Katz on July 16, 2008 at 10:05am EDT
  • Is it Rangel, or Wrangle?

  • relative greed
  • Posted by Rangler on July 16, 2008 at 3:00pm EDT
  • Rangel understands that since he is only a congressman he won't get a library named after him ala Bush Jr et al. However, the fund raising and conflicts of interest are quite the same.