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Tag Archives: higher education

HB 1771: one can only dream

28 Thursday Dec 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

General Assembly, HB 1771, higher education, missouri

Rep. Judy Morgan (D) [2016 file photo].

A bill prefiled yesterday:

HB 1771
Establishes the Missouri Tuition Equity Act
Sponsor: Morgan, Judy (024)
Proposed Effective Date: Emergency Clause
LR Number: 4731H.01I
Last Action: 12/27/2017 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HB 1771
[….]

The bill text:

SECOND REGULAR SESSION
HOUSE BILL NO. 1771 [pdf]
99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE MORGAN. 4731H.01I D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk

AN ACT

To amend chapter 174, RSMo, by adding thereto one new section relating to higher education tuition policy, with an emergency clause.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:
Section A. Chapter 174, RSMo, is amended by adding thereto one new section, to be known as section 174.820, to read as follows:
174.820. 1. This section shall be known and may be cited as the “Missouri Tuition Equity Act”.
2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, for the purposes of tuition, fees, and admission, the governing board of any Missouri higher education institution that receives any state funds whatsoever shall deem an individual a Missouri resident, unless or until the individual establishes a residence outside of Missouri, if all of the following conditions are met:
(1) The individual resided with his or her parent or guardian, or was emancipated while attending a public or private high school in this state;
(2) The individual graduated from a public or private high school or received the equivalent of a high school diploma in this state;
(3) The individual attended school in this state for at least two years as of the date the individual graduated from high school or received the equivalent of a high school diploma;
(4) The individual entered the United States prior to the enactment of this section;
(5) In the case of an individual who is not a citizen or a permanent resident of the United States, the individual provides the higher education institution with an affidavit stating that the individual will file an application to become a permanent resident of the United States at the earliest opportunity the individual is eligible to do so.
3. No Missouri higher education institution that receives any state funds whatsoever shall deny admittance to a student based solely on his or her immigration status, provided the student has satisfied the requirements of this section.
4. Any information collected under this section as part of a student’s admission shall remain confidential.
Section B. Because of the importance of providing educational opportunities for Missouri high school graduates, this act is deemed necessary for the immediate preservation of the public health, welfare, peace, and safety, and is hereby declared to be an emergency act within the meaning of the constitution, and this act shall be in full force and effect on July 1, 5 2018, or upon its passage and approval, whichever occurs later.

Investment in education by the state is essential for every individual and the future of the state.

HJR 62: be careful what you wish for

24 Sunday Dec 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

General Assembly, higher education, HJR 62, missouri

Prefiled last week:

HJR 62
Modifies the exclusions from “lucrative office or employment” for senators and representatives holding employment other than their elected office.
Sponsor: Sommer, Chrissy (106)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2018
LR Number: 5304H.02I
Last Action: 12/18/2017 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HJR 62
[….]

Lucrative?

The summary:

HJR 62 — GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEMBER QUALIFICATIONS [pdf]
SPONSOR: Sommer
Upon voter approval, this proposed Constitutional amendment allows members of the General Assembly to hold certain compensated positions with the state or political subdivisions including employment with police departments, firefighter departments, secondary schools or public colleges or universities, and part-time employment that is compensated at less than $20,000 annually with a political subdivision or special district.

As if public colleges or universities will still exist as we know them by the time this becomes law?

HB 1528: micromanagement

08 Friday Dec 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Dean Dohrman, General Assembly, HB 1528, higher education, micromanagement

Representative Dean Dohrman (r) [2016 file photo].

A bill, prefiled on Wednesday:

HB 1528
Requires students at public and private institutions of higher education to pass an examination on the provisions and principals of American civics as a condition of graduation
Sponsor: Dohrman, Dean (051)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2018
LR Number: 5087H.01I
Last Action: 12/06/2017 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HB 1528
[….]

Who’s going to pay for this new unfunded mandate?

The bill text, as prefiled:

SECOND REGULAR SESSION
HOUSE BILL NO. 1528 [pdf]
99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE DOHRMAN. 5087H.01I D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk
AN ACT

To amend chapter 170, RSMo, by adding thereto one new section relating to the Missouri higher education civics achievement examination.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:

Section A. Chapter 170, RSMo, is amended by adding thereto one new section, to be 2 known as section 170.013, to read as follows:

170.013. 1. Any student pursuing an associate’s or bachelor’s degree from a public or private institution of higher education, except those attending private trade schools, shall successfully pass an examination on the provisions and principles of American civics with a score of seventy percent or greater as a condition of graduation from such institution. The examination shall be known as the “Missouri Higher Education Civics Achievement Examination”.
2. The examination required under this section shall consist of at least fifty questions, but shall not exceed one hundred questions, and shall be similar to the one hundred questions administered to applicants for United States citizenship by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services division of the Department of Homeland Security. Subject matter on the examination shall include the United States Constitution, the United States Bill of Rights, governmental institutions, historical manifestations of federalism, and history of constitutional interpretation and amendments.
3. The examination required under this section may be included within any other examination that is administered on the provisions and principles of the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the state of Missouri, and in American history and American institutions, as required in subsection 3 of section 170.011.
4. Institutions of higher education may use online testing to comply with the provisions of this section.

I could be good with this if the members of the Missouri General Assembly had to take and pass the same test before they could be sworn in. But we should expect a higher passing score from them, right?

HB 1474: once again, this time with feeling

06 Wednesday Dec 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

General Assembly, HB 1474, higher education, micromanagement, missouri, Rick Brattin, tenure

Representative Rick Brattin (r) [2013 file photo].

A bill on higher education prefiled yesterday by Representative Rick Brattin (r):

HB 1474
Eliminates tenure for new employees at public institutions of higher education and specifies information that public institutions of higher education must make available to the public
Sponsor: Brattin, Rick (055)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2018
LR Number: 4356H.01I
Last Action: 12/05/2017 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HB 1474
[….]

Some of the text:

SECOND REGULAR SESSION
HOUSE BILL NO. 1474
99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE BRATTIN. 4356H.01I D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk
AN ACT

To repeal section 173.1004, RSMo, and to enact in lieu thereof two new sections relating to public institutions of higher education.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:

Section A. Section 173.1004, RSMo, is repealed and two new sections enacted in lieu 2 thereof, to be known as sections 173.940 and 173.1004, to read as follows:
173.940. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no public institution of higher education in this state shall award tenure to any person who is hired by such institution for the first time on or after January 1, 2019. The provisions of this section shall not apply to employees hired prior to January 1, 2019.
[….]

Why, this seems rather punitive in nature.

It appears that any understanding of the concept of faculty tenure and the implications for faculty recruitment and shared governance escape the representative. He should, perhaps, bother to ask someone who does.

[….]
Rep. Brattin is a 1999 graduate of Lee’s Summit High School.
[….]

Well, that could explain some of it.

Eric Greitens and the conservative agenda in higher education

22 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Board of Curators, David Horowitz, Eric Greitens., higher education, Intellectual diversity, Jamie Farmer, Jay Layman, missouri, University of Missouri

Eric “The Kid” Greitens may be gunning for MU. A couple of weeks ago Missouri’s new, young Governor took out his budget spleen on Missouri’s higher education system, hitting already lean institutions with the loss of a considerable amount of state support – while planning even more of the corporate and higher bracket income cuts responsible for the budget shortfall that prompted the cuts in the first place. Recently he announced the appointment of three new members to the University of Missouri Board of Curators, two of whom come from the business community. In his comments he remarked that higher education needed to be “improved,” specifically by encouraging “more intellectual diversity,” and bringing “real world experience to the table.”

These three facts, budget cuts, loading the university governing structure with business people, and pointedly stressing “intellectual diversity” – shorthand in rightwing circles for inculcating conservative viewpoints in higher education – reflect the influence of both the shadowy and the more overt conservative supporters of Kid Greitens, the folks he needs to please if he expects them to fund his future presidential aspirations.

Intellectual Diversity: While intellectual diversity in academia is an admirable value, the phrase itself has taken on a life of its own in conservative circles. Most notably, it has been popularized in rightwing circles by the reprehensible bigot and conservative provocateur, David Horowitz – who is funded by the Scaife family foundations, the Koch brothers’ DonorsTrust, and the Bradley Foundation, all of which, according to Jane Meyer in her book, Dark Money, have attempted to establish conservative beachheads in American universities. Horowitz has used the term to justify witch-hunts to eliminate what he deems undue leftist influence on campus as well as his demands for what amounts to affirmative action for conservative academics in humanities and social sciences faculties.

In the mouth of Kid Greitens, recipient of over two million dollars of that same “dark money,” likely from one or the other of the same spigots that fund folks like Horowitz, the phrase should raise the hackles of all fair-minded advocates for higher education. Responsible apologists for conservative thought such as Mark Lilla have noted that the “hysteria” whipped up by the intellectual McCarthyism of those like Horowitz who agitate for one-sided “intellectual diversity” contributes “to the dumbing down” of higher education.

Market-based educational priorities: At least two of the appointees to the Board of Curators are drawn from the business world.  Jeff Layman, who was also the finance chair for the Greitens campaign, is a senior vice-president at Morgan Stanley. Jamie Farmer runs a company that supplies materials for fracking operations. Both supported Eric Greitens’ campaign financially, and it’s safe to assume that they’re hunky-dory with his intimation that he wants to introduce “intellectual diversity” to the University, very likely to the detriment of the more traditional understanding of diversity, intellectual or otherwise.

It is also likely that, as at other institutions with governing boards that are top heavy with business types, they will try to move the University into more of a supporting role for business and corporate interests, giving priority  to the training of engineers, accountants and other cogs of industry – and, incidentally, to disciplines where the dreaded “liberal bias” is less pronounced.

Another goal may be to decrease the institutional control of faculty and administrators who are viewed as untrustworthy by many wealthy conservatives. Greg Lewis at The Century Foundation  observes that public universities are now predominantly governed by boards that skew toward businessmen and women who are often at odds with the values of the institutions they oversee. He claims that their approach fails to “reflect the broad diversity of fields and experiences at public institutions,” and instead emphasize decision-making that is hasty, top-down, often uninformed and reflecting market-driven rather than intellectual priorities.

Cracking the Budget Whip: So it seems that Greitens has hinted at his goals for MU: “intellectual diversity” that emphasizes conservative philosophy and values, the elevation of intellectually neutral, technical disciplines, and the devaluing of more traditionally liberal areas such as humanities and social sciences. His appointees to the board seem likely to find these goals simpatico. He only needs one more thing to facilitate the type of change he seems to be promising to initiate: a crisis.

Budget cuts can be just such a crisis. Lack of funds decreases options and makes institutions more open to rapid change. Fear of even more budget cuts are also effective when it comes to whipping recalcitrant administrators into shape. And finally, scarce state resources opens the door to conservative donors who have long been seeking to assert a stronger presence in public higher education. For example, John Warner observes that:

Arizona has reduced its spending on higher education by 41%, zeroing out its contributions to two community colleges entirely. Meanwhile, the libertarian Koch Foundation has stepped into the void, offering funding to Arizona State in return for favorable treatment of their ideas inside the institution.

Conservademia: Jane Meyer remarks in her book that the 1969 Columbia University protests by Afican-American students were the catalyst that helped initiate conservative efforts to turn American universities rightward. Similarly the complaints of the MU African-American Concerned Student 1950 group stirred latent racist indignation in the state and left Missouri right wingers fuming at what they saw as administrative capitulation to the demands of the Black students.

There are clear signs that Kid Greitens is going to try to ameliorate such conservative criticism of the university’s administration while furthering the educational agenda of his conservative supporters. Indications are that he will be just as willing to take aim at liberal campus culture and try to shift it rightwards as he has been to go gunning for labor unions. The guy who in his campaign ads literally aimed a big gun on what he metaphorically designated Jefferson City political culture, may soon declare open season on campus liberals.

Crocodile Tears

17 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri Governor

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

budget, Caleb Rowden, cuts, Eric Greitens., governor, higher education, Kansasfication, Misouri, SB 509

Caleb Rowden (r) [2016 file photo].

Caleb Rowden (r) [2016 file photo].

Governor Eric Greitens (r) has ordered significant budget cuts, with higher education taking a significant hit. Over the years the republican controlled General Assembly has cut back the possibilities of revenue, creating a death spiral of diminishing revenue and continuous cuts in public investment.

Via Twitter from Tony Messenger at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

messenger011717

Tony Messenger ‏@tonymess
‘Nobody was more disappointed about what happened yesterday than I was,’ says Sen. @calebrowden on @EricGreitens higher ed cuts. #moleg
2:37 PM – 17 Jan 2017

On May 6, 2014 the republican controlled General Assembly overrode then Governor Jay Nixon’s (D) veto of SB 509, an ill conceived bill which further exacerbates these same budgetary shackles and insures the Kansasfication of Missouri.

Then Representative (now Senator) Caleb Rowden’s (r) disappointment over the hits the University of Missouri (in his district) would take wasn’t evident (r) on May 6, 2014 when he voted [pdf] (Journal of the House, 1578) to override Governor Nixon’s veto.

Spare us the tears.

Previously:

SB 509: the moment when all hope for the future of Missouri died (May 6, 2014)

readin’, ‘ritin’, and ‘rithmatic

10 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House, social media

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

General Assembly, higher education, J. Eggleston, missouri, Rudi Keller, social media, Twitter, University of Missouri

One view of the utility of higher education:

RudiKeller031016

Rudi Keller ‏@CDTCivilWar
Rep. Eggleston: #Mizzou is ‘there to instill the occupational skills and knowledge to enable our children to get a job. That’s it’ #moleg 11:47 AM – 10 Mar 2016

That explains a lot, though probably not what Representative Eggleston (r) thinks it does.

Critical thinking skills are apparently not a priority for some people.

Can you major in cubicle dwelling? Worker drone studies?

We await the instructions of our corporate overlords.

HB 2100: How would you know, when it’s readily apparent you slept through all of your classes?

09 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

General Assembly, HB 2100, higher education, Jason Chipman, missouri

Representative Jason Chipman (r) on the House floor - January 6, 2016.

Representative Jason Chipman (r) on the House floor – January 6, 2016.

Another “hey, let’s micromanage higher education” bill, filed on Thursday by Representative Jason Chipman (r):

HB 2100
Specifies that if a faculty member at a public college or university does not teach a certain percentage of classes for a course, students in that course shall receive reimbursement of a percentage of tuition

Sponsor: Chipman, Jason (120)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2016
LR Number: 4662H.02I
Last Action: 01/07/2016 – Introduced and Read First Time (H)
Bill String: HB 2100
Next Hearing: Hearing not scheduled
Calendar: HOUSE BILLS FOR SECOND READING

Ladies and gentlemen, your Missouri General Assembly in action.

HB 1637: #*^& you, @$$hole

03 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri House

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Dean Dohrman, HB 1637, higher education, micromanagement, missouri

There, lesson delivered. Without the waste of legislative time and effort.

Representative Dean Dohrman (r) on the House floor [2014 file photo].

Representative Dean Dohrman (r) on the House floor [2014 file photo].

A bill introduced today by Representative Dean Dohrman (r):

HB 1637

Requires graduates of two-year and four-year institutions of higher education located in Missouri to have successfully completed a three credit hour course in the freedom of speech

Sponsor: Dohrman, Dean (051)

Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2016
LR Number: 4911H.01I
Last Action: 12/03/2015 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HB 1637
[….]

[emphasis added]

Micromanagement, it’s in their nature. Unless you’re a corporation.

Previously:

Meta: in the public sphere (November 12, 2015)

Our world in three Tweets

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2016, higher education, Jason Kander, missouri, Roy Blunt, Senate, social media, student debt, student loans, Twitter

Oh, there is a difference.

Our Senator Roy Blunt (r):

HuffPost College ‏@HuffPostCollege

Senator blames college students for borrowing [….] 12:39 PM – 21 Apr 2015

The article:

David Halperin

Senator Blunt Blames College Students for Borrowing

Posted: 04/21/2015 12:28 pm EDT

Parroting a familiar talking point by bad actors in the for-profit college industry, Senator Roy Blunt (R-MO) appeared last week to blame students for their high student loan burdens. After questioning Secretary of Education Arne Duncan at a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing on Thursday about regulations aimed at for-profit colleges, Blunt, a member of the Senate GOP leadership, said (at the 1:38:00 mark in the linked video):

We ought to be talking about … the debt problem when you get out of school. How much of that related to the actual cost of going to school and how much it related to what you thought your living standards should be while you went to school, and I’m pretty confident over the years that the student expectations for their personal living standards in school have often increased where they would have been a few just years ago.

[….]

Secretary of State Jason Kander (D), who is challenging Senator Blunt (r) in 2016:

Jason Kander ‏@JasonKander

I want to help middle class Missourians send their kids to college. Shaming those kids won’t be my approach. 3:25 PM – 21 Apr 2015

Social media is so immediate:

Jeff Mazur ‏@jmaz

Can’t students just provide for their “living standards” with lavish lobbyist wedding gifts like normal people? 3:36 PM – 21 Apr 2015

Okay, that one left a mark.

June 17, 2004, in the Washington Post:

[….]

Gifts of Legislative Love

[….]

In the section of his report that is supposed to disclose gifts of more than $285, House Majority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) pointed readers to attached correspondence concerning his wedding gifts. Blunt married Abigail Perlman, a lobbyist for Altria Corp., the parent company of Philip Morris, in October.

On Sept. 15, Blunt wrote to Rep. Joel Hefley (R-Colo.), chairman of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, and noted his impending marriage. “I anticipate receiving wedding gifts in connection with this event and I would like to request a waiver of the limitations of the gift rule to allow me to accept gifts in connection with my wedding,” he wrote.

[….]

On Oct. 1, Blunt wrote Hefley requesting a reporting waiver “to prevent the paperwork of filing numerous disclosure forms for every gift my wife and I receive.”

Oct. 3, Hefley and Mollohan granted his request.

[….]

Must be nice.

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