LEGISLATIVE RELATIONS
COMMITTEE
Anticipated Chair of
the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Interview
Q&A: Lamar
Alexander On Education In The New Congress
"Higher
education, preschool funding, the Common Core and the future of No Child Left
Behind are just a few of the education policies that will be in play under the
new Republican-controlled Congress. How will these things change? We called
Sen. Lamar Alexander to ask," NPR reports.
"The
Tennessee Republican is expected to become chairman of the Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions Committee. There, he'll preside over the Republicans'
education agenda, an issue he's been deeply engaged with for decades as a
governor, presidential candidate, university president and U.S. education
secretary."
When
asked about his higher education agenda, Alexander said, "The cost of
higher education is more affordable than people think. At a community college,
average tuition is $3,600. At a four-year public institution, it's $8[,000] to
$9,000. Many students can get a Pell Grant they don't have to pay back, up to
$5,000. We lend $100 billion every year in student loans at an interest rate of
about 4 percent to people with no credit history. Tennessee is the first state
to say two years of community college is free. I expect more states to do that.
I'm
[also] working with [Colorado Democratic] Sen. Michael Bennet to take the
108-question student-aid application form, known as FAFSA, and reduce it to two
questions: 'What's your family income?' and 'What's your family size?' ... The
complexity of the form is discouraging students from attending college. So the
greatest barrier to more college graduates is this federal application form.
...
I
think ratings are fine, but the U.S. Congress and Department of Education don't
have any business trying to develop a rating system for 6,000 higher education
institutions in the country. All we'll get is a lot of controversy, a lot of
regulations and a lot of confusion. I mean, how is Washington going to compare
Nashville Auto-Diesel College [currently known as Lincoln College of
Technology] and Harvard? Leave that to accrediting agencies. Have a lot of
transparency so students and families can find out all they can about colleges.
We have a marketplace of colleges and universities. It has produced the best
system of higher education in the world. We don't need the federal government
overregulating it."
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