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In Short

A Holiday Gift from Eric Cantor: Better College Data

On November 7th, the day after the Presidential election, House Majority Leader (R-VA) sent a to his Republican colleagues expressing disappointment with the outcome, but also the belief that there was room for Republicans and Democrats to 鈥渁ct to bridge our differences and deliver results.鈥 Among the short list that Cantor laid out was the following: 鈥淢aking it easier for parents and students to make informed decisions about what type of post-high school education is right for them.鈥

That鈥檚 right. The day after the most expensive Presidential campaign in American鈥檚 history, amidst deep divisions about the fiscal cliff, taxes, spending, and social issues, education data made the legislative 鈥渢o do鈥 list.

Both political parties spent much of the past year talking about the need for in the face of skyrocketing college costs. President Obama a college with comparable, easy-to-understand indicators of . The called for greater transparency around 鈥渃ompletion rates, repayment rates, future earnings, and other factors that may affect their (college) decisions.鈥 The message was clear and consistent鈥攕tudents and families need better information.

But we can鈥檛 get students and families the information they need unless we have the information they need. And right now . We have a jumble of clunky, uncoordinated, and incomplete federal and state , each of which captures some part of the picture (and in many cases information not really relevant to the picture), but do not work together to create a whole picture. The fragmented these systems don鈥檛 talk to each other and, therefore, cannot answer basic鈥攁nd critical鈥攓uestions.  Questions like whether students at particular institutions graduate, whether they get jobs, and whether they can comfortably pay back their loans. And let鈥檚 not even ask how students in specific subgroups are doing. Yet students, families, and taxpayers continue to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on higher education.

The problem was eloquently summed up by Virginia Foxx (R-NC), Chair of the , at a on college data held just six weeks before the election:

We have so much data and we seem to know so little. What a tragedy for all the money that we鈥檙e spending in this country.

There鈥檚 not a lot that Republicans and Democrats agree on these days, and even less that they agree to act on. Yet Foxx sees the tragedy of higher education data, the Obama administration and have introduced measures to improve how students and families access college information, and Cantor has put the issue on his to-do list. Consensus is rare in Washington, and we can鈥檛 afford to waste it. The Department of Education, Congressional leaders, and other stakeholders must articulate the key questions they want to be able to answer to help students and families make informed decisions. Then they need to work to ensure that we have the data to answer the questions.

The election is over. Now, let鈥檚 govern.

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Amy Laitinen
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Amy Laitinen

Senior Director, Higher Education

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

A Holiday Gift from Eric Cantor: Better College Data