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	<title>Parents Countdown to College Coach &#187; college degrees</title>
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		<title>The 3-year college degree</title>
		<link>http://www.parentscountdowntocollegecoach.com/2010/02/the-3-year-college-degree/</link>
		<comments>http://www.parentscountdowntocollegecoach.com/2010/02/the-3-year-college-degree/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Feb 2010 22:51:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Suzanne Shaffer</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[college degrees]]></category>
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By Lauren Joffe for The Real College Guide
Heads up, traditionalists! A radical new idea promotes kissing the  four-year academic program buh-bye and saying hello to a three-year  system.
As accustomed as we are to its infrastructure, it would  take some serious shaking up to rattle the U.S. education system. Yet  Robert Zemsky, [...]]]></description>
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<address>By Lauren Joffe for <em>The Real College Guide</em></address>
<p>Heads up, traditionalists! A radical new idea promotes kissing the  four-year academic program buh-bye and saying hello to a three-year  system.</p>
<p>As accustomed as we are to its infrastructure, it would  take some serious shaking up to rattle the U.S. education system. Yet  Robert Zemsky, chairman of the Learning Alliance for Higher Education at  the University of Pennsylvania and author of <em>Making Reform Work: The  Case for Transforming American Higher Education</em>, is advocating for  major changes on university campuses &#8212; most notably a three-year  college program.</p>
<p>Zemsky argues that given today’s economic, political and  technological climate, it’s time for Americans to minimize cost,  unnecessary resources and wasted time repeating coursework. His proposed  plan would cause a drastic uplifting of the current system, impacting  high schools as well. But it is Zemsky’s hope that reform ultimately  would spawn a more streamlined institution. While the government might  not be ready to back such lofty plans, the real question is: Are you?</p>
<p><strong>How will students benefit from such reform?</strong><br />
According to  Professor Zemsky, shifting to a more sequenced, regimented three-year  program will save students time and money &#8212; cutting tuition costs by a  whopping 25 percent. This is less moolah out of your pocket, not to  mention additional interest that builds up as you work to pay off hefty  loans. At the very foundation, students would pay for 90 credits over  the typical 120.</p>
<p>In a contemporary society where minimizing time and financial  expenditures ranks high on to-do lists, it seems almost given that a new  system should be put into place. Right? Not necessarily. For one, the  program basically assumes all undergrads will go on for a post-grad or  m<a href="http://www.parentscountdowntocollegecoach.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/3-year-degree.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium  wp-image-721" style="margin: 7px;" title="3-year-degree" src="http://www.parentscountdowntocollegecoach.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/3-year-degree-300x129.jpg" alt="3-year-degree" width="300" height="129" /></a>asters degree. “If you want college to help vocationally, you have to  go beyond the undergrad,” says Zemsky. Under the new system, college  would be a breeding ground whereby students learn the basics of a  particular trade. It is then in graduate school that learning would  become truly vocational.</p>
<p><strong>So how would high schools be affected by this change?</strong><br />
High school seniors are infamously plagued by “senioritis” and finding  ways to sidestep mundane assignments. Zemsky proposes doing away with  wasteful course schedules during senior year and instead modeling it  after the current freshman year of college. He suggests pre-college  seniors take some of the basic humanities and sciences normally taken by  college freshmen.</p>
<p>Zemsky tells us in a phone interview, “High schools would need to  make assessments at a ninth-grade level as to whether a student is  making progress to be ‘college-ready.’ Remediation would take place at  this time rather than at the first year of college. The 10th and 11th  grade levels would look the same, and the 12th grade would become equivalent to the first year of college. There would be an alignment so  that senior year of high school sets students up for freshman year of  college.”</p>
<p><strong>What is the downside of a three-year college program?</strong><br />
Some students feel it’s unreasonable to be expected to choose a major  and commit at age 18. And indeed, the pressure is really on if the  typical college career were condensed. “I don’t know what I plan on  majoring in,” says U Penn freshman Brett Levine. “In a three-year  program, undecided people have less time to explore new subject areas.</p>
<p>“Even with people who know what they want to study, a three-year  program would surely be more demanding if requirements for majors or  graduate schools admissions stay the same. A lot of pre-meds and  engineering students have difficulty satisfying graduation requirements  as is. For undecided students like myself, the variety of course options  is incredible. It allows me to explore new subject areas unavailable in  high school.”</p>
<p>Says Zemsky: “Students are given endless choices, but it’s expensive.  It confuses lots of people, and it takes longer to graduate because  they get lost. Redesign the curriculum so it is not a smorgasbord of  options.” Say goodbye to elective courses too, because in this system,  there’s no room for classes that do not directly relate to your plan of  study.</p>
<p><strong>How would such lofty goals be implemented?</strong><br />
Zemsky doesn’t  kid himself into thinking this would be a minor undertaking: “To really  kick off reform, it would take an invitation from the president. I  can’t imagine this happening without presidential leadership.” And, yes,  he’s referring to the president of the United States.</p>
<p>In a recent <em>Newsweek</em> article, Zemsky argues his position by  stating, “Everything around us &#8212; technology, medicine, politics &#8212; has  changed … and [higher education] will too have to rethink what we are  about.”</p>
<p>Still, Levine questions the practicality of Zemsky’s proposal. “A  three-year program would essentially make college an even more stressful  period. It would probably restrict options for traveling abroad, which  many students value. It has many potential benefits for <em>some</em> students. People who know they want to major in economics, political  science, Spanish or other relatively less intense majors may only need  three years. However, others need four to prepare for graduate school or  their desired career.”</p>
<p>And furthermore, Levine adds, “Socially, it obviously restricts the  amount of time commonly dubbed ‘the best years of your life.’”</p>
<p><strong>What do you think? Do you think our kids are growing up too fast? Do you think a 3-year degree is a wise educational choice?<br />
</strong></p>
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