
It was really hard to watch the 
American Graduation Initiative get  cut from SAFRA.  It was one of the most promising initiatives for higher  education in decades, representing a real shift from a culture of focus  on college access to one focused on student success.  I was crushed to  see it go unfunded. 
Of course, I'm feeling a little better since Jill  Biden called for a White House summit on community colleges, to be  held this fall.  An Obama conference is a decent consolation prize.   It's actually a coup, when you think about how seriously community  colleges have been taken by policymakers in the past (read: not at all).
 Washington needs to make the most of this opportunity.  Doing this  requires pushing far beyond a pleasant conversation about "best  practices and successful models." Because let's be honest-there  aren't very many "best practices" we can feel confident in scaling up  right now.  That's why building the body of research evidence on  effective community college practices was a goal of AGI.
 Instead Dr. Biden should move the ball forward on a serious  conversation about the role of the two-year colleges in American higher  education by asking the toughest questions. These should include:
 • What constitutes positive, measurable outcomes for students at  these schools? What does "making community colleges better" mean?
 • Is making community colleges "more accessible" desirable, if it  means bringing into college more students with less academic and  financial preparation?  Under what conditions?
 • Are there efficiencies that can be gained without compromising the  quality of the academic experience? For example, should state systems of  community colleges be encouraged to specialize their in-person academic  offerings and expand (and coordinate) their online offerings?
 • What role should data play in informing decision-making of  community college leaders? Data of what kind, and collected by whom?
 • Which additional resources will generate the greatest returns for  community college students?
 Dr. Biden must emphasize that the entire sector needs to work  together, across geographic boundaries (such as urban/rural and state  lines), to come up with some common answers.  Sure, community colleges  grew out of independent communities but they now serve a much larger,  national role. Collective thinking about solutions will benefit them,  and help them to establish greater visibility and a more powerful voice.
 This serious day will be a very important one.  We can't be naïve.  Even those who think the nation needs more college-educated adults and  believe in accessible higher education openly discredit the work of  community colleges.  Know a kid who wants to earn a bachelor's degree?  Some folks will counsel that kid to avoid community colleges.  Their  advice is based on pretty rock-hard statistical data, but its  implications are troubling. Have we basically given up on a two-year  route to a four-year degree? Or can we do more to change those numbers  in the near future?  I hope the answer from the Summit is a convincing  "yes."  We need the Obama Administration to lead the way.