Championing Social Mobility

Ellen Neufeldt
{"title":"Championing Social Mobility","authors":"Ellen Neufeldt","doi":"10.18060/27325","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When I became president of California State University San Marcos (CSUSM) during the summer of 2019, I was excited to launch a listening and learning tour to get to know the campus community, which includes just over 16,000 students and nearly 60,000 alumni. As a former vice president for Student Engagement and Enrollment Services at Old Dominion University (ODU), I was drawn to CSUSM because of its diverse and multicultural community as well as its established track record of student success. I was eager to meet our students and hear their stories – why did they choose CSUSM? What has their educational journey been like? What are their hopes and dreams for the future? \n  \nOf course, no two students provided the same answer. Some told me about the pride of being first in their families to go to college but the uncertainty that went along with that as they navigated the financial aid and admissions applications without parental support. Others told me about the challenges of going to school while juggling part-time or full-time jobs and/or parenting responsibilities. And still, others shared stories from their previous military experience or their desire to make a career change/enhance their career trajectory. While almost universally, our students share their excitement to make progress toward their degrees, many also imparted complex combinations of family responsibilities, employment, and financial pressures which required constant time and energy to navigate. \n  \nAs leaders in CUMU institutions, you know these stories – the individual details are different, but themes of students striving to overcome financial, geographic, and socioeconomic challenges are surely familiar. Institutions like ours proudly embrace our regional role to serve as strongholds of the American Dream, serving an outsized share of historically underserved populations (such as low-income, minority and first-generation students) and offering programs and services that meet them where they are, fitting into the reality of their lives with opportunities to engage in real-world learning that will launch them into meaningful careers and a lifetime of success. \n  \nNow, as we emerge from the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic - the effects of which we will surely feel for years to come – coupled with rising income inequality and economic recession, our role as elevators of social mobility for the students and communities we serve is more important than ever. \n  \nBut what is social mobility? When I began sponsoring conversations on this topic at my former institution, where I co-founded a National Center on Social Mobility, I noted that there was not always a clear understanding of the definition. At its core, social mobility is the movement of individuals from one socioeconomic status to another, and higher education is one of the most important drivers of an individual’s upward mobility in society. At CSUSM, we recognize that the education we provide helps our students transcend barriers faced by earlier generations, unlocking their potential for lifelong success. This isn’t only key for individuals and families but organizations, industries and society which benefit from a broadened talent pipeline, innovation, greater social equity and economic mobility across all sectors.   \n  \nHowever, historically, higher education in the United States has contributed to the socioeconomic divide rather than solved it. National college rankings have exasperated the situation further, lauding exclusivity in admissions rather than scrutinizing the ways colleges actually create broad access. While organizations like CollegeNet have published a Social Mobility Index (on which CSUSM was proud to rank No. 1 in fall 2022) for about a decade, it was only in 2018 that US News added a social mobility factor its rankings – a direct outcome of those early conversations I just mentioned. Another exciting and promising marker – a new Carnegie classification will measure how institutions contribute to social and economic mobility while serving a diverse student population. \n  \nToday, I am so proud to be a part of CUMU, an organization that recognizes not only that “Place Does Matter” but that we are uniquely positioned to impact social mobility and inclusive regional growth – economic growth that is distributed fairly across society and creates opportunities for all. Collectively, we represent over 52 metropolitan areas; and 33% of our institutions are designated minority serving institutions. At CSUSM, 55% of our students are first generation, about 50% are Hispanic/Latin-x, 40% are 23 years or older, 40% are Pell-eligible, and over 10% are veterans or military affiliated. Because of all these factors, the majority of our students are considered “nontraditional” – although I would argue that nontraditional IS the new tradition. \n  \nAs we look to the immediate future, as leaders and practitioners in our respective organizations, it’s an economic and social imperative that we develop and share new strategies which can fuel social mobility and inclusive regional growth. Providing access in an affordable way, broadening the educational pipeline, committing to student success, and graduating students into high-quality jobs will have a transformational ripple effect in our communities. Individually and collectively, we can leverage these practices to support our students and communities by: \n \nPromoting Integrative & Hands On-Learning \nExpanding Access & Prioritizing Student Success \nEliminating Barriers and Advocating for Affordability \n","PeriodicalId":34289,"journal":{"name":"Metropolitan Universities","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Metropolitan Universities","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18060/27325","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

When I became president of California State University San Marcos (CSUSM) during the summer of 2019, I was excited to launch a listening and learning tour to get to know the campus community, which includes just over 16,000 students and nearly 60,000 alumni. As a former vice president for Student Engagement and Enrollment Services at Old Dominion University (ODU), I was drawn to CSUSM because of its diverse and multicultural community as well as its established track record of student success. I was eager to meet our students and hear their stories – why did they choose CSUSM? What has their educational journey been like? What are their hopes and dreams for the future?   Of course, no two students provided the same answer. Some told me about the pride of being first in their families to go to college but the uncertainty that went along with that as they navigated the financial aid and admissions applications without parental support. Others told me about the challenges of going to school while juggling part-time or full-time jobs and/or parenting responsibilities. And still, others shared stories from their previous military experience or their desire to make a career change/enhance their career trajectory. While almost universally, our students share their excitement to make progress toward their degrees, many also imparted complex combinations of family responsibilities, employment, and financial pressures which required constant time and energy to navigate.   As leaders in CUMU institutions, you know these stories – the individual details are different, but themes of students striving to overcome financial, geographic, and socioeconomic challenges are surely familiar. Institutions like ours proudly embrace our regional role to serve as strongholds of the American Dream, serving an outsized share of historically underserved populations (such as low-income, minority and first-generation students) and offering programs and services that meet them where they are, fitting into the reality of their lives with opportunities to engage in real-world learning that will launch them into meaningful careers and a lifetime of success.   Now, as we emerge from the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic - the effects of which we will surely feel for years to come – coupled with rising income inequality and economic recession, our role as elevators of social mobility for the students and communities we serve is more important than ever.   But what is social mobility? When I began sponsoring conversations on this topic at my former institution, where I co-founded a National Center on Social Mobility, I noted that there was not always a clear understanding of the definition. At its core, social mobility is the movement of individuals from one socioeconomic status to another, and higher education is one of the most important drivers of an individual’s upward mobility in society. At CSUSM, we recognize that the education we provide helps our students transcend barriers faced by earlier generations, unlocking their potential for lifelong success. This isn’t only key for individuals and families but organizations, industries and society which benefit from a broadened talent pipeline, innovation, greater social equity and economic mobility across all sectors.     However, historically, higher education in the United States has contributed to the socioeconomic divide rather than solved it. National college rankings have exasperated the situation further, lauding exclusivity in admissions rather than scrutinizing the ways colleges actually create broad access. While organizations like CollegeNet have published a Social Mobility Index (on which CSUSM was proud to rank No. 1 in fall 2022) for about a decade, it was only in 2018 that US News added a social mobility factor its rankings – a direct outcome of those early conversations I just mentioned. Another exciting and promising marker – a new Carnegie classification will measure how institutions contribute to social and economic mobility while serving a diverse student population.   Today, I am so proud to be a part of CUMU, an organization that recognizes not only that “Place Does Matter” but that we are uniquely positioned to impact social mobility and inclusive regional growth – economic growth that is distributed fairly across society and creates opportunities for all. Collectively, we represent over 52 metropolitan areas; and 33% of our institutions are designated minority serving institutions. At CSUSM, 55% of our students are first generation, about 50% are Hispanic/Latin-x, 40% are 23 years or older, 40% are Pell-eligible, and over 10% are veterans or military affiliated. Because of all these factors, the majority of our students are considered “nontraditional” – although I would argue that nontraditional IS the new tradition.   As we look to the immediate future, as leaders and practitioners in our respective organizations, it’s an economic and social imperative that we develop and share new strategies which can fuel social mobility and inclusive regional growth. Providing access in an affordable way, broadening the educational pipeline, committing to student success, and graduating students into high-quality jobs will have a transformational ripple effect in our communities. Individually and collectively, we can leverage these practices to support our students and communities by: Promoting Integrative & Hands On-Learning Expanding Access & Prioritizing Student Success Eliminating Barriers and Advocating for Affordability
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倡导社会流动性
当我在2019年夏天成为加州州立大学圣马科斯分校(CSUSM)的校长时,我很高兴地发起了一次倾听和学习之旅,以了解校园社区,其中包括16,000多名学生和近60,000名校友。作为Old Dominion University (ODU)负责学生参与和招生服务的前副校长,我被CSUSM所吸引,因为它的多元化和多元文化社区,以及它在学生成功方面的良好记录。我渴望见到我们的学生,听他们的故事——为什么他们选择了CSUSM?他们的教育历程是怎样的?他们对未来的希望和梦想是什么?当然,没有两个学生给出相同的答案。一些人告诉我,作为家里第一个上大学的人,他们感到很自豪,但在没有父母支持的情况下,他们在申请经济援助和入学申请时感到不确定。还有人告诉我,一边上学一边兼顾兼职或全职工作和/或育儿责任的挑战。还有一些人分享了他们以前的军事经历,或者他们想要改变职业或提升职业轨迹的愿望。虽然几乎所有的学生都对取得学位感到兴奋,但许多学生也面临着家庭责任、就业和经济压力的复杂组合,这些都需要持续的时间和精力来应对。作为中南财经大学各机构的领导,你们知道这些故事——每个人的细节不同,但学生努力克服经济、地理和社会经济挑战的主题肯定是熟悉的。像我们这样的机构自豪地接受了我们的地区角色,成为美国梦的据点,为历史上服务不足的人群(如低收入者、少数民族和第一代学生)提供服务,并提供满足他们需求的项目和服务,为他们提供参与现实生活的机会,让他们进入有意义的职业生涯,获得一生的成功。现在,随着我们从COVID-19大流行的深渊中走出来,加上收入不平等加剧和经济衰退,我们作为学生和我们所服务的社区的社会流动性升降机的作用比以往任何时候都更加重要。但什么是社会流动性?当我开始在我以前的机构发起关于这个话题的对话时,我注意到,对这个定义并不总是有一个清晰的理解。我在那里共同创立了一个国家社会流动性中心。社会流动的核心是个人从一种社会经济地位向另一种社会经济地位的流动,而高等教育是个人在社会中向上流动的最重要驱动力之一。在CSUSM,我们认识到我们提供的教育可以帮助我们的学生超越前几代人面临的障碍,释放他们终身成功的潜力。这不仅对个人和家庭至关重要,对组织、行业和社会也至关重要,这些组织、行业和社会都将受益于人才储备的扩大、创新、更大的社会公平和所有部门的经济流动性。然而,从历史上看,美国的高等教育助长了社会经济鸿沟,而不是解决了它。全国大学排名进一步加剧了这种情况,它赞美招生中的排他性,而不是审查大学实际创造广泛入学机会的方式。虽然CollegeNet等机构发布社会流动性指数(CSUSM自豪地在2022年秋季排名第一)已经有大约十年的历史了,但直到2018年,《美国新闻与世界报道》才在排名中加入了社会流动性因素——这是我刚才提到的早期对话的直接结果。另一个令人兴奋和有希望的标志-一个新的卡内基分类将衡量机构如何在为不同的学生群体服务的同时促进社会和经济流动性。今天,我很自豪能成为CUMU的一员,这个组织不仅认识到“地点很重要”,而且认识到我们在影响社会流动性和包容性区域增长方面具有独特的优势,即在整个社会中公平分配并为所有人创造机会的经济增长。总的来说,我们代表了超过52个大都市地区;我们33%的机构被指定为少数族裔服务机构。在CSUSM,我们的学生中55%是第一代,大约50%是西班牙裔/拉丁裔,40%是23岁或以上,40%是佩尔资格,超过10%是退伍军人或军事相关人员。由于所有这些因素,我们的大多数学生被认为是“非传统的”——尽管我认为非传统是新的传统。 当我在2019年夏天成为加州州立大学圣马科斯分校(CSUSM)的校长时,我很高兴地发起了一次倾听和学习之旅,以了解校园社区,其中包括16,000多名学生和近60,000名校友。作为Old Dominion University (ODU)负责学生参与和招生服务的前副校长,我被CSUSM所吸引,因为它的多元化和多元文化社区,以及它在学生成功方面的良好记录。我渴望见到我们的学生,听他们的故事——为什么他们选择了CSUSM?他们的教育历程是怎样的?他们对未来的希望和梦想是什么?当然,没有两个学生给出相同的答案。一些人告诉我,作为家里第一个上大学的人,他们感到很自豪,但在没有父母支持的情况下,他们在申请经济援助和入学申请时感到不确定。还有人告诉我,一边上学一边兼顾兼职或全职工作和/或育儿责任的挑战。还有一些人分享了他们以前的军事经历,或者他们想要改变职业或提升职业轨迹的愿望。虽然几乎所有的学生都对取得学位感到兴奋,但许多学生也面临着家庭责任、就业和经济压力的复杂组合,这些都需要持续的时间和精力来应对。作为中南财经大学各机构的领导,你们知道这些故事——每个人的细节不同,但学生努力克服经济、地理和社会经济挑战的主题肯定是熟悉的。像我们这样的机构自豪地接受了我们的地区角色,成为美国梦的据点,为历史上服务不足的人群(如低收入者、少数民族和第一代学生)提供服务,并提供满足他们需求的项目和服务,为他们提供参与现实生活的机会,让他们进入有意义的职业生涯,获得一生的成功。现在,随着我们从COVID-19大流行的深渊中走出来,加上收入不平等加剧和经济衰退,我们作为学生和我们所服务的社区的社会流动性升降机的作用比以往任何时候都更加重要。但什么是社会流动性?当我开始在我以前的机构发起关于这个话题的对话时,我注意到,对这个定义并不总是有一个清晰的理解。我在那里共同创立了一个国家社会流动性中心。社会流动的核心是个人从一种社会经济地位向另一种社会经济地位的流动,而高等教育是个人在社会中向上流动的最重要驱动力之一。在CSUSM,我们认识到我们提供的教育可以帮助我们的学生超越前几代人面临的障碍,释放他们终身成功的潜力。这不仅对个人和家庭至关重要,对组织、行业和社会也至关重要,这些组织、行业和社会都将受益于人才储备的扩大、创新、更大的社会公平和所有部门的经济流动性。然而,从历史上看,美国的高等教育助长了社会经济鸿沟,而不是解决了它。全国大学排名进一步加剧了这种情况,它赞美招生中的排他性,而不是审查大学实际创造广泛入学机会的方式。虽然CollegeNet等机构发布社会流动性指数(CSUSM自豪地在2022年秋季排名第一)已经有大约十年的历史了,但直到2018年,《美国新闻与世界报道》才在排名中加入了社会流动性因素——这是我刚才提到的早期对话的直接结果。另一个令人兴奋和有希望的标志-一个新的卡内基分类将衡量机构如何在为不同的学生群体服务的同时促进社会和经济流动性。今天,我很自豪能成为CUMU的一员,这个组织不仅认识到“地点很重要”,而且认识到我们在影响社会流动性和包容性区域增长方面具有独特的优势,即在整个社会中公平分配并为所有人创造机会的经济增长。总的来说,我们代表了超过52个大都市地区;我们33%的机构被指定为少数族裔服务机构。在CSUSM,我们的学生中55%是第一代,大约50%是西班牙裔/拉丁裔,40%是23岁或以上,40%是佩尔资格,超过10%是退伍军人或军事相关人员。由于所有这些因素,我们的大多数学生被认为是“非传统的”——尽管我认为非传统是新的传统。 展望不久的将来,作为我们各自组织的领导者和实践者,我们必须制定和分享能够促进社会流动性和包容性区域增长的新战略。以负担得起的方式提供机会,拓宽教育渠道,致力于学生的成功,让学生毕业后找到高质量的工作,将在我们的社区产生变革性的连锁反应。无论是个人还是集体,我们都可以利用这些实践来支持我们的学生和社区:促进综合和实践学习,扩大机会,优先考虑学生的成功,消除障碍,倡导负担能力 展望不久的将来,作为我们各自组织的领导者和实践者,我们必须制定和分享能够促进社会流动性和包容性区域增长的新战略。以负担得起的方式提供机会,拓宽教育渠道,致力于学生的成功,让学生毕业后找到高质量的工作,将在我们的社区产生变革性的连锁反应。无论是个人还是集体,我们都可以利用这些实践来支持我们的学生和社区:促进综合和实践学习,扩大机会,优先考虑学生的成功,消除障碍,倡导负担能力
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