The Chronicle of Higher Education
Community Colleges

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A BIG TO-DO LIST

Nearly 300 leaders from the worlds of business, higher education, and philanthropy convened in Washington to discuss how to carry out the recommendations made last fall by the federal Commission on the Future of Higher Education.
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings (Photograph by Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images)

Selected Articles (For Chronicle Subscribers)

LARGEST RAISE IN 3 YEARS

Midlevel administrators received a median 3.8-percent salary increase in 2006-7.

SEEING RED IN A RED STATE: An adjunct instructor at a two-year college in Idaho who reportedly made inflammatory remarks about Republicans in her English class has become a target of right-wing bloggers and has received death threats.

'PALMGATE' BRANCHES OUT: Another lawsuit has been filed in a scandal at MiraCosta College over palm trees that were grown on the Oceanside campus and then secretly sold for personal profit.

CAPPING COLLEGES' FEES: Two proposals to limit colleges' participation in Perkins Loans would slowly strangle the program for needy students, say college financial-aid officers.

Community Colleges Supplement

 Current supplement  October 2005  October 2004
Article Illustration PROFILES IN INNOVATION

Two-year colleges are experimenting with supplemental instructors, databases to aid local businesses, e-portfolios to help students focus on their work, life skills for the disabled, and efforts to improve faculty diversity.
Waell Y. Abed (above, center), a "supplemental instructor" at Tidewater Community College, leads small-group study sessions for students from classes that have high failure rates. (Photograph by Tom Cogill)

MONEY TALKS

Fund raising is now high on the agenda for many community colleges.

GRADUATES' GIVING

Community colleges are waking up to the potential of alumni donations and contacts.

THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY

Short, flexible study-abroad packages help two-year-college students in challenging circumstances.

BRAINY BARGAIN

Honors programs provide rich educations at affordable prices.

A TASTE OF TEACHING

Internships offer a path to community-college careers.

A PROFILE OF PRESIDENTS

Data on who the chief executives are and how they go about their jobs.

Commentary

Article Illustration IF YOU CAN'T BEAT 'EM ...

Kent A. Farnsworth outlines four lessons that community colleges can learn from their for-profit competitors.
(Illustration by Jon Krause)

QUIET STORMS

Community colleges are often considered far removed from controversies over academic freedom. But that, says Ann H. Franke, is a misconception.

WHY THEY FEEL INDEBTED

An administrator and an adjunct faculty member describe the differences community colleges made in their lives.

IDLE ENGINES

Donald C. Summers wonders why community colleges have been so slow to get their fund raising in gear.

ROOMS OF THEIR OWN

Richard A. Donovan bemoans how unstable living situations can undermine the work of talented students.

CLICKS INTO CHAOS

Too many community-college Web sites are mazes rather than informative gateways for prospective students and their parents, says Clifford Adelman.

MAKING THE LEAP

Joseph R. Ferrari offers tips on how faculty members at community colleges can move to four-year institutions, and why those baccalaureate colleges should welcome them.

INFERIORITY COMPLEX

You do community-college students no favor by underestimating them, says T. Allen Culpepper.

REVELATIONS

Bob Blaisdell loves getting to know his students through their writing.

BACK TO BASICS

Three community-college presidents describe how students' need for remediation has affected their campuses.







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Jobs in Community Colleges

New openings daily at two-year institutions, from the pages of The Chronicle.

Also of Interest

Facts & Figures:

Faculty salaries, 1999-2006

Average college costs

Issues in Depth:

Distance education