"If you see the oppression of the poor, and the violent perversion of justice and righteousness in a province, do not marvel at the matter; for high official watches over high official, and higher officials are over them."
Ecclesiastes 5:8
[Note: The Higher Ed. committee hearing can be viewed here. HB 17 is the first bill considered. Our testimony is at the two minute mark.]
Read this bill caption and consider whether anything good can come from this:
Relating to the establishment of the Texas Higher Education Innovation Accelerator for public institutions of higher education.We signed in against this hot mess of a bill when it was originally considered in the House. We were disappointed (but not surprised) when it passed the house in early May. Today it got a hearing in the Senate Higher Ed committee...and that makes us nervous.
The bill's proponents say that it's a workaround from the current bureaucracy, but all the does is add new bureaucracy cloaked in tech industry buzzwords; just read Section 5 of the bill:
We testified and told the committee that we thought this bill would accomplish nothing but adding more bureaucracy, and in that spirit we think the section of the bill quoted above speaks for itself.
Sec. 60.005. INNOVATION PLAN. (a) To participate in the accelerator, an eligible institution shall: (1) submit a letter of intent to participate to the commissioner; and (2) develop and submit an innovation plan to the institution's governing board as provided by this section. (b) An innovation plan must: (1) summarize the proposed educational programs to be offered under the accelerator, including: (A) each program's design, delivery methods, and implementation plan; and (B) the anticipated number and demographics of students to be served by each program; (2) describe in detail the modifications to traditional program structures necessary to implement the proposed educational programs, such as changes to institutional calendars, course schedules or structures, faculty workload, credit hours, or other program requirements; (3) identify how the proposed educational programs align with specific state and institutional goals; (4) include, to the extent practical, data regarding educational programs offered at other institutions of higher education that are similar to each proposed educational program, including: (A) student enrollment and demographics; (B) student academic success, including the average time for a student enrolled in the program to complete a certificate or degree; and (C) career placement data; (5) provide for the assessment of student academic success and ongoing program evaluation and improvement; (6) commit the institution to participation in regular meetings of the participating institutions and to the research and evaluation efforts of the accelerator; (7) include a plan for operations, staffing, oversight, and sources of funding for the innovation plan; and (8) identify any state statutes or rules that inhibit the goals of the innovation plan and from which the institution should be exempted on adoption of the plan, subject to Section 60.006, and state how the identified statutes or rules inhibit the goals of the plan and how an exemption from those statutes or rules will advance state and institutional educational goals. (c) In addition to the state statutes or rules identified under Subsection (b)(8), the institution may also identify other state statutes or rules that inhibit the goals of the innovation plan but from which the institution is not seeking an exemption. (d) An innovation plan may include one or more departments or certificate or degree programs. (e) If an eligible institution's governing board approves an innovation plan developed under this section, the institution shall: (1) submit a copy of the plan to the commissioner; and (2) post the plan on the institution's Internet website. (f) An eligible institution may implement one or more innovation plans that comply with this section.
But the chairman of the committee is carrying this bill, which means it has a real chance of passing.
Bottom Line: If the Senate kills this bill, they would be doing the state of Texas a favor.
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Chairman Kel Seliger: (512) 463-0131
Lt. Governor Dan Patrick: (512) 463-5342
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RE: [Note: The Higher Ed. committee hearing can be viewed here. HB 17 is the first bill considered. Our testimony is at the two minute mark.]
ReplyDeleteCan't find the link...
Thanks.
Just fixed the link.
Delete