"I heartily recommend Daniel DeVise’s profile of Trinity Washington University president Pat McGuire in this weekend’s Washington Post magazine. McGuire and her colleagues embody much of what is good and right about higher education. By transforming a failing women’s college into thriving university dedicated to serving minority and first-generation students, she is working in the best traditions of Catholic education. DeVise’s article is comprehensive so just a few things to add: Trinity’s success in serving minority students stands in marked contrast to other DC-area institutions. Trinity is drawing from the same pool of students coming out of DC’s notorious public school system. It is a low-resource institution–McGuire, after 20 years in the presidency, makes $202,000 a year. Many colleges cite lack of money and poor student preparation as an excuse for appalling failure rates. Trinity shows that a well-run, student-focused institution can make a huge difference in the lives of students. This doesn’t mean we should slack off on efforts to improve high school and provide resource equity to colleges that serve first-generation undergraduates. But many colleges can do much better than they are."
Peter Greene: What Did Kevin Huffman Learn from Failure?
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Writing in his blog Curmudgucation, Peter Greene reviews Kevin Huffman’s
career as a big Reform honcho and his latest advice about what the federal
governm...
47 minutes ago