Could Texas style higher education reform be headed to Florida? As our sister site, the Florida Independent, has reported, Gov. Rick Scott has been promoting
“„Tom Auxter, president of United Faculty of Florida, the state’s faculty union, said the plan is alarming. Florida public universities would become diploma mills with professors taking in as many students as they could, he said.
“„He worries that some of the state’s most talented and prestigious faculty, who sometimes have small classes that work on specialized projects, would leave.
“„“People are just mortified by it,” Auxter said. “The devil is alive and well in those details.”
“„The Texas report also recommends that colleges provide students with “learning contracts” that specifically disclose information about their degree programs, including graduation rates, class sizes and expected starting salaries for their majors.
“„State Rep. Marlene O’Toole, who’s in charge of the House’s higher education budget committee, said she expects to learn more about the plan in the coming weeks. Legislative committees will begin meeting next month in preparation for the new legislative session, which begins Jan. 10.
“„“I’m open for all ideas,” said O’Toole, R-Lady Lake. “I think we need to be.”
