Now that President Obama has been reelected, and he has more time to sit back and read Higher Ed Watch, we are presenting our wish list for his second term. [And Mr. President, while you’re at it, we’re sure you’ll enjoy our posts from last week highlighting your first term’s biggest higher education and !]
Among other things, we (the authors of this post) would like to see the Obama administration do the following:
- Hold college accountable for reigning in college costs and improving student outcomes. The administration must be willing to take on the of traditional colleges.
- Develop long-term solutions for revamping the federal financial aid programs, rather than continuing to to shore up funding for these programs in the heat of high-stakes budget battles.
- Finalize the financial aid shopping sheet and scorecard鈥攁nd make them mandatory. Students and families need clear, consistent, useable information at key points in their decision-making process. Given that many institutions currently benefit from the lack of this information, voluntary adoption of these efforts .
- Push for a student unit record system. We have a clunky hodgepodge of unconnected data systems that overly burden institutions yet are incapable of answering basic questions like 鈥渉ow do Pell students fare in college and in the workforce.鈥 Given the seismic shifts in America鈥檚 use of and comfort with data since the of 6 years ago, it is time to revisit the idea of a system that will allow students, families, taxpayers, and policy makers to know how students fare as they proceed through the educational system and into the workforce.
- Reform the back-end of the student loan program so that borrowers who are too financially distressed to repay their federal loans are not subject to the same harsh treatment as those who deliberately skip out on their loans. Those who simply don鈥檛 have the money to make their payments who have the power to chase them to their graves.
- Provide relief to struggling borrowers who were victims of the private student loan industry鈥檚 predatory lending practices. The administration should at the very least push Congress to , like all other consumer debt.
- Revise the Gainful Employment regulations and put teeth back into them. The administration should also consider applying of higher education institutions.
- Take oversight and enforcement responsibilities more seriously. Obama administration officials went to great lengths to strengthen the Education Department鈥檚 . But after rewriting the rules, they seemed timid about using their authority 鈥 even in where for-profit higher education companies acknowledged that major abuses had occurred.
- Fix the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 student loan servicing system. The student loan companies that the Education Department has hired to administer direct loans are clearly who are struggling with their repayment responsibilities. Meanwhile, the introduction of dozens of non-profit student loan servicers into the direct loan program 鈥 as required by the 2010 student loan reform bill 鈥 has created .
- Make Changes to the Pay-As-You-Earn and Income-Based Repayment Plans. The administration should who could benefit from these programs to access them. At the same time, it should make changes to the programs to ensure that they are .
- Promote experimentation and innovation. The administration should use the authority it has to create with federal financial aid that could pay for innovative delivery of higher education. Such experiments would allow for controlled testing of federal policy changes, which would give policy makers the opportunity to test the unknowns and push the boundaries of what is possible without having to upend the entire federal aid system.
That’s our wish list. How about yours? Please send us any higher education recommendations you may have for President Obama. We look forward to reading them.