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ICYMI: Rubio Joins NBC’s Meet the Press

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) joined NBC’s Meet the Press to discuss the inalienable right to life, the illegal mass migration crisis, and election-denier hypocrisy in legacy media. See below for highlights and watch the full interview on YouTube and Rumble. On the...

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Next Week: Rubio Staff Hosts Mobile Office Hours

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio’s (R-FL) office will host in-person Mobile Office Hours next week to assist constituents with federal casework issues in their respective local communities. These office hours offer constituents who do not live close to one of Senator Rubio’s...

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Rubio: DHS Must Do More to Fully Implement UFLPA

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has announced 26 additions to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) Entity List. While this is welcomed news, the Biden Administration has yet to include exporters who are tainting the United States’ supply chain...

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Reform Higher-Ed Accreditation for the 21st Century

Oct 5, 2015 | News

We all have our own American Dreams. Some of us aspire to be chief executive officers or the owners of our own small businesses. Others aspire to be talented teachers or skilled engineers. No matter the dream, we all want success, and we all want to be able to provide for ourselves and our families. We work hard so we can live comfortably, safely, and securely. In the 20th century, having a college degree usually guaranteed this outcome. If you graduated from a traditional four-year university, you could attain a well-paying job and eventually start a family.

Today, we have this same dream, but the global economy has vastly changed. Thanks to innovative ideas and new advancements in technology, 21st-century jobs require more technical skills and training than ever before. Having a college degree no longer guarantees that you will be competitive in the job market. Too often, students struggle to find employment after graduation and face massive student-loan debt. In America today, college graduates have more than $1 trillion in combined student loans, and that number only continues to climb.

The goal of public policy must be to ensure not only that an abundance of jobs are available for our people, but also that our people are equipped with the skills needed to attain those jobs. We can start by supporting the many innovative education approaches that have sprung up in recent decades, including technical schools, online colleges, and other alternative institutions. They help people get the advanced training and skills they need with more flexibility, lower costs, and less debt than most traditional colleges and universities.

Although these programs have proven to hold great promise, they are neglected by our current higher-education system. They are ineligible for federal student aid and their accreditation is often delayed for years. These innovative providers cannot compete with the cartel of existing brick-and-mortar colleges and universities that dominates the accreditation process and shields our higher-education system from reform, competition, and accountability. Many institutions supported by this system continue the lucrative practice of graduating students with tens of thousands of dollars in student-loan debt and degrees that will not lead to jobs.

Our higher-education system should be reformed to ensure that alternative education pathways are no longer stigmatized or discredited by the existing higher-education cartel. We have a responsibility to ensure that higher education is of the highest quality and that new, low-cost providers have an easier entryway into the market. That is why I have proposed a voluntary, alternative system of accreditation for innovative education providers as well as existing colleges and universities. Schools that offer a high-quality education and have a track record of helping students graduate, obtain jobs, and pay back their student loans could participate in this metrics-based authorization process in place of today’s burdensome input-focused accreditation process.

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