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The Shanghai International Design
Center designed by Lompreta Nolte Arquitetos, Nanda Eskes
Arquitetura & Architecture for Humanity is located in Yangpu,
China. The new complex consists of a structure divided into
green superimposed terraces, which will host, amongst others
things: a hotel, a museum, a library, commercial and office
spaces.The landmark
building is represented by the grand entrance (Marco Polos
door) consisting on two towers facing each other. Located at the
Western part of the site, it marks the symbol of international
openness of the new complex. The design garden and commercial
gallery (Galleria Matteo Ricci) are designed to be gathering
points and buffer zones between the campus and urban fabric.
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California is Reinventing Higher
Education, Is this a Model for New
Mexico
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
John Aubrey Douglass,
LAT)
September 13, 2011
It's time to think big and re-imagine California's public college and university
system, which has barely changed in five decades.
For most of the 20th century, California led the
nation and the world in the number of high school graduates who went on to
college and earned degrees. Its famed public higher education system profoundly
shaped the aspirations of the state's citizens and, ultimately, their views on
what it meant to be a Californian. That system also attracted talent from
throughout the nation and the world, and it helped build and sustain an
entrepreneurial spirit that shaped new sectors of the state's economy from
microchips to biotechnology.
California's higher education system will help define the state's future too.
However, the next chapter may be much less positive. The danger signs are
numerous: falling public funding on a per-student basis, unprecedented limits on
new enrollments, cuts in faculty positions and relatively low degree-production
rates compared with economic competitors in Europe, Asia and other parts of the
world. Whereas California was always among the top states in degree-completion
rates, it now ranks among the bottom 10. And yet educational attainment levels
are exactly what predicts the overall economic performance of states and
nations.
The recession is partly to blame. But the trends in California are long in the
making. And if budget and performance problems are the new reality, rather than
a temporary detour, they presage a very different California one less
educated, and therefore less innovative, less prosperous and less dynamic.
Most critics and observers of California's system remain focused on incremental
and largely marginal improvements, but that's not enough. If California is to
retain its luster as an economic powerhouse, the state needs to think big: It
needs to innovate and to re-imagine a higher education system that has barely
changed in five decades.
First, California's political, educational and business leaders should set an
ambitious goal that the state match or exceed the access and degree-production
rates of the highest-achieving states or, better yet, international competitors.
To achieve that goal, we must reconsider where students go to college.
More than 70% of all the state's postsecondary students are in community
colleges, an underfunded system where most students attend part time and are
struggling with their finances. The results include high attrition rates and low
degree-completion rates; some studies show only 18% of those who enter the
state's community colleges earn an AA degree, compared with a graduation rate of
more than 45% for California State University students and about 90% for
University of California students.
This means we must increase access to four-year schools. We must reverse the
current trend of reduced enrollment in the Cal State system caused by massive
budget cuts, faculty layoffs and reduced course offerings.
At the same time, we must build on existing strengths of the state system.
Historically, the distinct missions of each part of California's three-tiered
system contributed to its success at educating so many in its population. Now we
need to update that specialization.
We should allow a key number of community colleges, perhaps 10 or more, to grant
four-year as well as two-year degrees. Other states are already doing this;
their success and failures should be California's guide. In Florida, for
example, the experiment is about "training people for real jobs," says Miami
Dade Community College President Eduardo J. Padron, who cited nursing and
teaching programs.
"You won't see us starting a B.A. in sociology. We're offering degrees in things
the universities don't want to do," Padron said.
But one could imagine a more expansive role for these new hybrid colleges in
California that would help meet our goals. Some community colleges could focus
their curriculum on getting students transferred to a four-year degree program.
Others could offer a "gap"-year program to help address the remedial education
needs that drag down degree completion rates and burden the Cal State and UC
systems.
A new California Polytechnic University sector could build on the existing
campuses in San Luis Obispo and Pomona focused on a mission to support science,
engineering and technology businesses in California. A new online California
Open University could focus primarily on serving adult learners.
How would we pay for such changes? As a consequence of declining public funding,
the state is already slouching toward a system that progressively charges
wealthy students and international students more in order to subsidize low- and
middle-income students. It is time to confront the prospect of a permanent
shortfall in public funding, formalize this tuition and fee system (even at the
community college level) and figure out how it might best work to increase the
educational attainment of Californians. A companion solution, one found in other
parts of the world, is to more aggressively attract international students to
generate income for higher education, lower costs for native Californians and at
the same time bring top talent to the state.
These are all achievable reforms that need further vetting. The biggest danger
to California's well-being isn't just the political and economic morass that has
paralyzed the state for so long. It is our inability to conjure an alternative
future. In the case of California's once-famed higher education system, what is
required is aggressive political leadership at the state level and guidance by
the higher education community. It also requires the focused support of all
Californians who care about socioeconomic mobility, resurrecting a strong middle
class and maintaining a competitive economy.
John Aubrey Douglass is senior research fellow at the Center for Studies in
Higher Education at UC Berkeley.
douglass@berkeley.edu