Community, Technical, and Junior Colleges: Are They Leaving Higher Education?

1989 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 349-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darrel A. Clowes ◽  
Bernard H. Levin
Author(s):  
Steven Brint ◽  
Jerome Karabel

Of all the changes in American higher education in the twentieth century, none has had a greater impact than the rise of the two-year, junior college. Yet this institution, which we now take for granted, was once a radical organizational innovation. Stepping into an educational landscape already populated by hundreds of four-year colleges, the junior college was able to establish itself as a new type of institution—a nonbachelor’s degree-granting college that typically offered both college preparatory and terminal vocational programs. The junior college moved rapidly from a position of marginality to one of prominence; in the twenty years between 1919 and 1939, enrollment at junior colleges rose from 8,102 students to 149,854 (U.S. Office of Education 1944, p. 6). Thus, on the eve of World War II, an institution whose very survival had been in question just three decades earlier had become a key component of America’s system of higher education. The institutionalization and growth of what was a novel organizational form could not have taken place without the support and encouragement of powerful sponsors. Prominent among them were some of the nation’s greatest universities—among them, Chicago, Stanford, Michigan, and Berkeley—which, far from opposing the rise of the junior college as a potential competitor for students and resources, enthusiastically supported its growth. Because this support had a profound effect on the subsequent development of the junior college, we shall examine its philosophical and institutional foundations. In the late nineteenth century, an elite reform movement swept through the leading American universities. Beginning with Henry Tappan at the University of Michigan in the early 1850s and extending after the 1870s to Nicholas Murray Butler at Columbia, David Starr Jordan at Stanford, and William Rainey Harper at Chicago, one leading university president after another began to view the first two years of college as an unnecessary part of university-level instruction.


1935 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 405
Author(s):  
A. C. Krey ◽  
H. G. Doyle ◽  
W. C. Eells ◽  
L. V. Koos

10.28945/3888 ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 147-163
Author(s):  
Jennifer L Lebron ◽  
Jaime Lester

Aim/Purpose: This article argues that given the isomorphic pressures on both community colleges and four-year institutions, historic divisions between community college leadership programs and general higher education programs are no longer serving the needs of new scholars and practitioners in the field. Graduate programs of higher education should integrate an understanding of community colleges and institutional diversity in meaningful ways throughout a graduate curriculum now focused on four-year institutions. Background: Community colleges and four-year institutions are engaging in isomorphic change which is weakening traditional boundaries between these sectors to create a more integrated system of higher education. Methodology: Using a framework of institutional isomorphism, this article reviews recent literature on changes within community colleges and four-year institutions and provides recommendations for infusing this isomorphism into graduate higher education programs. Contribution: By infusing an understanding of institutional diversity into all graduate course-work, educators can prepare future scholars and practitioners for a changing higher education landscape and expand beyond reductive representations of the higher education field.


1984 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 19-20
Author(s):  
Erwin C. Cornelius

Within the last ten years only the most bold and innovative American community colleges have ventured to make an association between on-campus education and international education. Wasn't the latter better left to senior institutions which were equipped to handle highly technical, sophisticated, elitist manpower needs? Most all government grants and contracting involving American higher education and U.S. or foreign governments flowed to and through senior universities. For the most part this pattern remains the same today.But a viable argument has persistently been raised over the last ten years for increasing involvement of community-based junior colleges in international affairs. Raymond E. Schultz and others, documenting the maturation process of community colleges, have noted the urgent need for community college-type institutions abroad to train middle-manpower work forces and provide for greater human capital development through non-traditional higher education.


1966 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 437-443
Author(s):  
Bruce E. Meserve

As a nation we pride ourselves that half our our high school graduates enter college. Yet many of these people will not graduate. Moreover, five years from now nearly 70 percent of all jobs will probably require at least two years of college education. We note that in the early 1950's about 11 percent of all college students were in junior colleges. Now about one million students are enrolled in two-year institutions; this represents about 20 percent of all students in college and about twice the number in teachers’ colleges. With the help of local, state, and federal funds junior colleges are growing very rapidly. It is clear that junior colleges play a vitally important role in our program of higher education.


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