CHARLOTTE (Oct. 4, 2017) ā Sure, higher education benefits the student who earns a diploma. But it also helps the rest of us. āItās also a public good,ā Margaret Spellings, President of the University of North Carolina System, declares in the accompanying short video. āWhen I think about North Carolina and the high levels of… READ MORE
Gage and Eshelman: Spellings deserves ‘full-throated support’
By Hannah Gage and Fred Eshelman The importance to North Carolina of a world-class university system cannot be stressed enough. Our stateās reputation ā our ability to attract new jobs and industries, and our capacity to generate investment and opportunity for our citizens ā rests heavily on the success of the University of North Carolina… READ MORE
A long-term approach on teacher pay, preparation
CHARLOTTE (Oct. 4, 2017) ā North Carolina has made efforts in recent years to raise teacher pay from a low of 47th in the nation in 2013-14.1 Yet enrollment in the stateās schools of education is still down. āIām having fewer and fewer students, even though we have a fantastic program at UNC Charlotte,ā Susan… READ MORE
Spellings: āI just have real belief in DACA studentsā
CHARLOTTE (Oct. 4, 2017) ā In response to a studentās pointed question about making education affordable for immigrant students, UNC President Margaret Spellings reaffirms her support for so-called āDreamersā who stand to lose protections unless Congress acts. In September, President Trump rescinded the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a program adopted by the Obama… READ MORE
Why the skepticism about higher education?
CHARLOTTE (Oct. 4, 2017) ā Weāve all sensed it ā a growing divide in views of higher education. A Pew Research Center survey in June revealed that 58% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters nationwide now say colleges and universities have a negative effect on the country ā a dramatic shift from two years ago, when… READ MORE
Aim higher, achieve more
CHARLOTTE (Oct. 4, 2017) ā In a wide-ranging discussion, North Carolina’s political and higher education leaders shared their thoughts last week on how we can educate more North Carolinians for the jobs of tomorrow ā some of which havenāt been invented yet. The āAim Higher, Achieve Moreā forum at Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte… READ MORE
UNC board needs to support Margaret Spellings
By HUGH McCOLL Margaret Spellings came to North Carolina as President of the University of North Carolina System last year with an already-firm belief in making higher education accessible and affordable for as many students as possible. She understands that by 2020, 65 percent of U.S. jobs will require some form of higher education,1 so… READ MORE
Work together to keep higher education accessible
By Paul Fulton Co-Chair Higher Education Works North Carolinaās public universities have long been considered our stateās most important asset ā they offer opportunity to students from Murphy to Manteo, and in the process they serve as our stateās strongest economic driver. In fact, a study two years ago found that together, North Carolinaās public… READ MORE
BOWLES: Leading UNC into the future
By Erskine B. Bowles President Emeritus University of North Carolina We North Carolinians are blessed to have a high-achieving, diverse University system that is admired not just across our country, but around the world. Ā A 2015 analysis concluded our public universities generated $27.9 billion in additional income for North Carolinians.1 The 17 public universities that… READ MORE
āFreeā community college?
Our neighbors in Tennessee invented āfreeā community college. In 2014, Republican Gov. Bill Haslam launched the Tennessee Promise ā two years of tuition-free community college for Tennessee high school graduates. Ā Tennessee uses lottery money to create a ālast-dollarā scholarship that pays a studentās tuition after federal and other aid have been tapped.1 More than 33,000… READ MORE
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