Rep. John Boehner told a group of college presidents Tuesday that members of Congress are tired of hearing from constituents who can't figure out why their children can't transfer credit from one institution to another.
"We hear about it nonstop," Boehner (R-Ohio) said. He said that both of his daughters were "caught up" in the issue, thinking that they were taking courses that would transfer -- only to find out that wasn't the case.
Paternal instincts aside, the issue rankles lawmakers because it means that more students take longer to graduate than they would otherwise, so students are using federal aid (and not moving fully into the taxpaying professional world) longer than necessary.
Boehner's solution has two parts:
Boehner's opinions are not his alone -- and he has clout to back them up. The Republican is chairman of the House education committee. In that position, he will play a key role in this year's review of the Higher Education Act, the primary law governing federal student aid programs.
The significance of the proposal on accreditation is that many for-profit colleges are accredited by national accrediting bodies while most nonprofit colleges are accredited by regional groups. Some nonprofit colleges have resisted accepting credit from nationally accredited colleges, much to the anger of members of Congress and people like Boehner.
In his talk, at the annual meeting of the American Council on Education, Boehner stressed that he was willing to listen to any problems colleges have with his plan. But he stressed that he was not going to back down because of hypothetical examples that stretch scenarios past plausibility.
For example, he said that some have charged that under his plan, a medical school would have to award transfer credit for a canine anatomy course offered by a dog grooming school. Boehner mocked this scenario, and repeated his point about how the accrediting agency in question just couldn't be the sole reason for denying credit.
"We are trying to lean on people to bring some clarity" to the transfer process, he said.
Boehner also had some other messages for colleges: