Educators, social advocates say federal College Database could impact Hispanics
Sunday, December 5, 2004 at 12:02AM
TheSpook
A federal proposal to create a national database of all
college students has raised concerns within the education community.
Some fear the system is another step toward a "Big Brother" society and
could discourage Hispanics and other immigrants from seeking a degree.
The U.S. Department of Education says it wants more information about
students as a way to better track trends such as retention, graduation
rates and net tuition. The agency wants to create a unit record system
at the federal level that would collect data from individual student
records. "The department is holding public meetings with key
stakeholders from schools, states and other interested parties to get
feedback and suggestions," agency spokeswoman Stephanie Babyak said in
an e-mail to The Associated Press on Monday. The National Association
of Independent Colleges and Universities is opposed, and already has
begun lobbying Congress to quash the proposal. "Our biggest concern is
that if a student takes a single course, they will be entered into a
major national database. It would keep records on them by social
security number," said NAICU spokeswoman Sarah Flanagan. "We don't
believe that enrolling in college is the type of activity that should
warrant this type of big brother intrusion." Before the Department of
Education can proceed with the project, Congress must approve the
development of the new system. [
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