
June 2007 > Events
POME Colloquium Offers Stimulating Debut
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| Goodwin Liu |
Jeannie Oakes |
Kathryn Baron |
Policy, Organization, Measurement and Evaluation faculty organizers Dan Perlstein, Bruce Fuller and Mark Wilson, aided
by student area representatives Laurie Mireles and Leah Walker, launched
a successful Colloquium series of 14 engaging events in 2006–07.
The most contentious session in the series was
the appearance of Sandy Kress, a former education adviser to President
Bush and a lead figure in the creation of the No Child Left Behind
Act. He defended the legislation in front of a jam-packed audience
in Tolman Hall room 2515 on March 6. The Meet the Press–style
panel discussion also included Boalt Hall School of Law Professor
Goodwin Liu, National Public Radio/KQED FM reporter Kathryn Baron
and Mireles. A lively question-and-answer session followed opening
remarks, with most of audience and panel members expressing frustration
with the accountability features of the legislation, currently being
considered for reauthorization in Congress.
Another well attended talk was given by UCLA’s Jeannie Oakes,
Presidential Professor in Educational Equity and Director of the University
of California’s All Campus Consortium on Research for Diversity
and Institute for Democracy, Education & Access. Oakes discussed
the low college participation rates of California's African American,
Latino and American Indian students, and the K–12 school conditions
that help explain them. With the audience, she discussed a variety
of policy recommendations for removing the educational roadblocks that
unfairly impede these students.
Mark Rashid, Chair of UC Board of Admissions
and Relations with Schools (BOARS) and a professor of Civil and Environmental
Engineering at UC Davis, and GSE professor David Stern, who is UC
Berkeley’s representative
on the committee, gave the final presentation of the term. Stern offered
an overview of UC systemwide eligibilty and campus selection procedures
as well as their shortcomings. Rashid highlighted the admissions proposal
that was unanimously approved by BOARS.
This proposal, which will eventually require
passage by UC’s
Board of Regents to take effect, eliminates the use of the statewide
eligibility index to guarantee admission, and instead, offers a guarantee
to review the entire application of any student above a basic threshold
(e.g. meeting a-g requirements), and encourages such students to apply.
The proposal continues guaranteed admission only for Eligibility in
the Local Context students (the top 4 percent of students in each participating
California high school class).
Lisa Chavez, the academic coordinator for UC
Berkeley’s Center
for Latino Policy Research, rounded out the Spring Semester program
with a talk entitled “Preparing for Transfer: Latinos in California
Community Colleges.”
Fall Semester speakers were Annette Lareau,
Professor of Sociology at University of Maryland; Anthony Bryk, professor
of Organizational Studies in Education and Business at Stanford University;
Marshall Smith, Director of the Education Program at The William & Flora
Hewlett Foundation; Samuel Lucas, professor of Sociology at UC Berkeley;
Edith Ng, a lecturer in UC Berkeley’s Peace and Conflict Studies;
Carla Trujillo, director of UC Berkeley’s Graduate Diversity
Program; and GSE professor Norton Grubb.
Plans for next year’s Colloquium are
underway when the entire series will focus on different aspects of
the No Child Left Behind Act.