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Commission on the Future of Higher Education

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The formation of a Commission on the Future of Higher Education, also known as the Spellings Commission, was announced on September 19, 2005 by U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings. The Commission is charged with recommending a national strategy for reforming post-secondary education, with a particular focus on how well colleges and universities were preparing students for the 21st-century workplace, and a secondary focus on how well high schools were preparing students for post-secondary education. In its Report, scheduled for official release on September 26, 2006, the Commission focuses on the areas of access and affordability (particularly for non-traditional students), the standard of quality in instruction, and the accountability of institutions of higher learning to their constituencies (most particularly students and their families, taxpayers, and others who might be regarded as investors in the system). Much of the content of the Spellings Commission draft is based on the "Measuring Up" reports in which each state evaluates the status of its higher education.

File:Spellings-0919 5.jpg
Secretary Spellings and former North Carolina Governor James B. Hunt at the announcement of the Secretary's Commission on the Future of Higher Education

Formation of Commission

Announced September 19, 2005.

Report

Commission votes to approve draft, August 9, 2006.

Report scheduled for official release, September 26, 2006.

Response to Report's Recommendations

The report does not come out until September 26, 2006, but there was a "report card" that is not affiliated, but is does overlap some of the same areas as the report. The "report card" looks at individual states and assesses their higher education since 2000. This "report card" focuses on most of the same areas as the actual report does. Spellings says that she sees similarities and she is proud that her report has similarities to the National Center's report.

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