The following column, âMichael Bloomberg unveils 'progressive' higher education plan,â by Liz Willen, was published by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education, and based at 911±ŹÁÏÍű.
As a Republican mayor of New York City, Michael R. Bloomberg championed an education agenda that President Donald J. Trump could agree with: Letting charter schools proliferate, giving parents choice and running education more like a business.
Yet as a Democratic presidential hopeful, Bloomberg now has that both echoes and expands upon policies his fellow Democratic candidates have already called for: Free community college, greater investment in Pell grants and automatic income-based repayment plans for student loans.
In fact, he no longer sounds like Trump at all, at least when it comes to talking about higher education; he has yet to make his K-12 plan available.
In a phone call with journalists Monday, Bloombergâs advisors touted his ambitious and expensive proposals (an investment of $700 billion over 10 years) to make college fairer and more affordable, including boosting statesâ investment in higher education, simplifying financial aid forms and eliminating legacy admissions. They said heâd pay for his ideas by, among other things, raising for corporate taxes.
And overall, Bloombergâs plans represent a clear departure from Trumpâs education agenda, especially the presidentâs recent proposed education budget for fiscal year 2021. Trumpâs plan would reduce the federal role in education, eliminate public service loans and tighten spending on financial aid programs.
Trumpâs plan could push college out of reach for low-income students. Bloombergâs plan calls for helping such students instead, by directly investing in private colleges and universities with large populations of low-income students. Boosting Pell grants would cover their books, meals, transportation and child care â all frequent obstacles to college completion.
Julie Peller, executive director of the bipartisan, nonprofit advocacy group known as Higher Learning Advocates, praised Bloombergâs plan for recognizing âthat the demographics and needs of learners today have changed,â and for including a focus on completion and earning outcomes for low-income students.
But Peller was among those who worry how heâd pay for it. âWhat tradeoffs can we expect with an ambitious plan like this?â she wondered.
And skepticism emerged, some of it because of Bloombergâs self-paying, late entry into the race, along with his K-12 track record demanding âdata-driven results,â based on student test scores and favoring competition to public education.
âComing into the race late and with his own finances has given him the advantage of studying other candidate positions, to crib and place himself where he likes among their prior pronouncements,â noted David Bloomfield, a professor of education law at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. âHeâs photo-shopping his higher-ed plan into a developed picture where it will do him the most good.â
Bloomfield was a frequent critic of the ex-mayorâs K-12 agenda, but gives him props for âa thorough, progressive plan touching all bases â more Bernie [Sanders] than [Pete] Buttigieg, borrowing from [Elizabeth] Warrenâs plan â full playbook, even though it comes from arguably the most conservative leading candidate in the race for the Democratic nomination.â
As is typical of Bloomberg, his plan also calls for a fair number of accountability measures. Two-year colleges would have to invest in âevidence-based strategies to increase completion rates,â and eligibility would hinge on students transferring to schools or programs with four-year courses of study or that lead directly to degrees. Davis Jenkins, a senior research scholar at the , 911±ŹÁÏÍű, likes the focus on more effective outcomes. And Michael Horn, the author of âChoosing College: How to Make Better Learning Decisions Throughout Your Life,â likes the focus on students.*
âMayor Bloomberg is introducing a plan that appears more progressive than many of the candidates in the race, by focusing on the neediest students and families and including private schools, not just public colleges,â Horn said.. âIt further shows his stripes by not just allowing students to afford pricey tuition at college, but also focusing on studentsâ other needs like food and transportation, which are significant barriers for low-income students completing college.â
Gail Mellow, the former president of LaGuardia Community College in Queens, N.Y., said she liked the plan as well, particularly his focus âon finding ways to incentivize elite colleges to accept low-income students, while at the same time increasing support of community colleges and HBCUs.â
The former mayor himself wasnât on the call Monday outlining his priorities to the media or answering questions; instead he had his advisors and Gina Raimondo, Rhode Islandâs Democratic governor, tout them.
âI think it is fantastic,â Raimondo said of Bloombergâs agenda, although she spent much of her time on the call pushing the success and growth of her own signature plan, which gives students the option of either two years of free community college or a scholarship covering their third and fourth years at a state university.
It is less clear how Bloombergâs call for ending legacy admissions at colleges that give preference to alumni will go over. His own alma mater John Hopkins recently did so, although it may have helped that Bloomberg gave Hopkins higher-edâs biggest-ever gift ($1.8 billion), devoted exclusively to financial aid.
Bloombergâs advisors also did not specify how a tax on the wealthy would work, or explain many of the other particulars, but Rick Hess, director of education policy strategies at the American Enterprise Institute, said he thought that was less important at the moment.
âThese [ideas] are more about markers and signals,â Hess said. âHe wants to be big and expansive and generous. Itâs more of a vision document than one in which details matter.
He is trying to say, âIâm planting my flag on bold and progressive plans, but Iâm a technocrat with smart people.â This is what happens if you get a lot of smart progressive experts together and have them dream up something that sounds progressive.â
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the speakers to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, or staff either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
* Clarification: This sentence has been updated to reflect that Michael Horn was responsible for the comments about Bloombergâs focus on students.