Built to Teach
Originally published in the September 2007 issue of The Washington Monthly.
In most ways, Hayley Bates is a typical American college student. She goes to a public school in the suburbs of
At the other college, however, things are … different. "Harder." First of all, her professor never seems to explain anything. Instead, he's constantly posing questions that seem deliberately vague, then he "tells you to go find the materials and figure out the answer for yourself." She can't skip class, even if it's been a long day selling popcorn, because she's part of a group of students who are all doing hands-on research and wrestling with tricky questions together; she doesn't want to let them down. She feels like she's learning a lot, sure, but she didn't realize college would be so much work.
The most surprising thing is that Hayley's other college isn't some kind of elite school that only accepts the smart students who can handle such a tough workload. It's a two-year institution that hardly anyone outside of
That a two-year college could be more academically rigorous than a four-year university—one that's a "first tier" national university, according to U.S. News & World Report—would seem unlikely. It's long been an article of faith in higher education that any four-year university is better than any two-year college. Yet Hayley's experience of the comparative advantage of Cascadia (which is located next to the University of Washington) is borne out by hard data. Although its enrollees typically have less promising academic backgrounds than UW freshman, Cascadia graduates who then continue at UW earn better grades than their peers. It's hard to imagine a clearer indication that the education students receive at Cascadia is superior.
Indeed, other measures of teaching quality suggest that Cascadia is the best community college in America. Using data from a well-respected survey of educational best practices, the Community College Survey of Student Engagement, the Washington Monthly has created the first-ever list of the nation’s top two-year colleges. (See "America's Best Community Colleges") Cascadia places number two overall, and in those measures most closely correlated with high grades and graduation rates—the extent to which teaching is “active and collaborative”—Cascadia tops the list. …
Read more from this article in The Washington Monthly's annual college rankings package.
Related
More in Community Colleges
Authored By
Connect With Education Sector
Subscribe to our Biweekly Digest, event invitations, and more.
