In an earlier post on the subject of health care reform, I complained that I do not understand the national debate going on in Washington, DC like I should.  Two local organizations – West Virginians for Affordable Health Care and the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy – have taken care of that in a new publication called The Health Express. The Health Express provides the information I need to know in simple easy-to-understand terms.

Why do we need reform?  Forty-six million Americans and 250,000 West Virginians don’t have medical insurance.

What are the major issues?  (1) Health insurance for every American; (2) Meaningful insurance reform; (3) Establish a health exchange that includes a public plan; (4) Reform of the health care delivery system; (5) Financing coverage for all Americans.

What are the options for providing health care for every American?  (1) Expand Medicaid to cover all low-income adults.  (2) Require all large employers to provide health coverage to their employees or pay a fee.  (3) Require all Americans to have health coverage.

etc., etc., etc.

And it ends with a bibliography where I can go to learn more!  Excellent work!

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Having had the pleasure of working around several people with disabilities over the years, I have gained an appreciation for the difficulties they face … whether it be trying to maneuver around the halls of the West Virginia State Capitol in a wheelchair or reading textbooks if blind.

Two weeks ago Inside Higher Ed reported on a lawsuit brought by the National Federation for the Blind and the American Council of the Blind against Arizona State University for implementing a pilot program that will use Amazon’s new Kindle e-reader to distribute books to students.  Why the lawsuit?  While the Kindle can translate digital books into audio, “users can access the feature only through on-screen menus that are not accessible to the blind.” (Emphasis in original.)

The article intrigued me because West Virginia has a chapter of a little-known organization, Recording For the Blind and Dyslexic (RFB&D), which takes textbooks and converts them into audio form with the help of volunteer readers.  The audio texts are then made available to blind and dyslexic individuals.

I encourage each of you to learn more about RFB&D and consider attending the local chapter’s Black, White and Read All Over Ball at Huntington’s Big Sandy Superstore Arena on 25 September 2009.

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In 2009, with the competition of talking heads like Bill O’Reilly on the right and Keith Olbermann on the left, it’s hard to imagine that there was a day little less than three decades ago when the most trusted person in America was a television journalist.  But that’s the way it was.

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Yet another topic highlighted at the World Conference on Higher Education last week was the increase in the number of women in higher education.  Internationally, women now outnumber men for the first time, and that trend is expected to increase.  In the United States and West Virginia, women in higher education began to outnumber men quite a few years ago.  Today, for example, more than 55% of West Virginia’s public institution students are women.

Last month, Foreign Policy wrote about the results of these trends.  The subtitle and first sentence say it all: “Manly men have been running the world forever.  But the Great Recession is changing all that, and it will alter the course of history.  The era of male dominance is coming to an end.”  In addition to noting that women soon will account for 60% of higher education students in the United States, the article points out that 80% of the job losses experienced since November have been experienced by men.  Foreign Policy goes on to discuss the probable consequences of this shift.

I had been bothered by the ARRA’s heavy emphasis on “shovel-ready” infrastructure projects and other activities which benefit men disproportionately.  No more.  Men need all the help they can get.

In the larger scheme of world history, the trend from a man’s world to a woman’s world, which was not a central focus of the World Conference on Higher Education, may be the most significant.

Yet another topic addressed by World Conference on Higher Education attendees was the trend of decreasing government contributions to higher education as a percentage of the overall cost of higher education.  This trend is especially pronounced in Europe, which has a tradition of providing free public higher education.  But the trend also is pronounced in West Virginia.  At the beginning of the millennium, the State paid about 60% of a four-year student’s cost of education (not cost of attendance, which includes room and board, etc. and is another matter); nine years later students are being assessed almost 60% of the cost.  A dramatic shift.  Having said that, please realize that this analysis ignores student financial aid, which increased dramatically over that same period at the state level, so West Virginia higher education – especially baccalaureate institutions, which benefitted disproportionately from the PROMISE scholarship – is not quite as poor as some claim.

Despite what you might hear in the hallowed halls of academe, there is a reasonably good argument for having students pay for their own higher education, even if they have to take out student loans to do so.  In 2006 the average male with a high school diploma earned $37,030, while the average male with a bachelor’s degree earned $60,910. A rather substantial loan payment could be made with that $23,880 in extra income.  If the average college graduate is going to see that kind of benefit, why shouldn’t he or she pay for it?  Furthermore, why should that high school graduate earning $23,880 less than the college graduate subsidize the college graduate’s education with his or her taxes?

There are two reasonably good responses to these points.  The first relates to fairness and equity.  Research tells us that students from poorer families, particularly with no history of college attendance, too often make the wrong decision from a purely economic perspective not to attend college.  Do we really want the rich to get richer and the poor to get poorer?  The second relates to the larger public benefits that accrue to an educated society – stronger economic development, greater civic engagement, etc.  The rising tide of education lifts all boats.

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