Action Plan for Higher Education: Improving Accessibility, Affordability and Accountability
September 2006



"Over the years, we've invested tens of billions of dollars in taxpayer money and just hoped for the best. We deserve better."
— U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings
More Resources
Higher Education Update

A college diploma has become increasingly essential to achieving the American Dream. One year ago, Secretary Spellings formed the bipartisan Commission on the Future of Higher Education to launch a robust national dialogue on the need to strengthen higher education to remain competitive in the 21st century. The Commission's Sept. 19, 2006 final report—A Test of Leadership: Charting the Future of Higher Education—found that "U.S. higher education needs to improve in dramatic ways," changing from "a system primarily based on reputation to one based on performance."

Today, Secretary Spellings announces an Action Plan designed to improve higher education's performance and our ability to measure that performance. The proposals will make higher education more accessible, affordable and accountable to students, parents, business leaders and taxpayers.

Accessibility

"There are far too many Americans who want to go to college but cannot—because they're either not prepared or cannot afford it." — Secretary Spellings

To expand access to higher education we must better educate and prepare our students, beginning with high standards and accountability in our public schools.

The Secretary's proposal:

Facts and Findings:
"Access to American higher education is unduly limited by... inadequate preparation, lack of information about college opportunities, and persistent financial barriers." — Commission on the Future of Higher Education

Affordability

"There is little to no information on why costs are so high and what we're getting in return." — Secretary Spellings

Tuition continues to outpace inflation, health care costs and family income levels. While funding for Pell Grants has increased nearly 50 percent over the past five years, the financial aid system remains in urgent need of reform. We must streamline the process to help students and families prepare, plan and pay for college.

The Secretary's proposal:

Facts and Findings:
"Too many students are either discouraged from attending college by rising costs, or take on worrisome debt burdens in order to do so." — Commission on the Future of Higher Education

Accountability

"No current ranking system of colleges and universities directly measures the most critical point—student performance and learning." — Secretary Spellings

In the Information Age, it is essential that clear, comprehensive and comparative data about colleges and universities be collected and made available to students, parents, and policymakers.

The Secretary's proposal:

Facts and Findings:
"Because data systems are so limited and inadequate, it is hard for policymakers to obtain reliable information on students' progress through the educational pipeline." — Commission on the Future of Higher Education


Last Modified: 05/07/2008