May 22, 2012

Community colleges report big jump in summer enrollment

More people are choosing to spend part of their summer in a college classroom in Iowa. Two of the state’s largest community colleges are reporting double-digit percentage increases in summer enrollment.

Laurie Wolf is the Executive Dean of Student Services at Des Moines Area Community College. She says the number of credit hours at DMACC are up 19.5% while enrollment’s up 15% over last summer.

More than 10,700 students were enrolled at DMACC when summer classes started May 25. Wolf believes it’s a sign of the times. “While we’re seeing the economy bump back up for employment, we are also seeing people who are saying ‘well, I can only get a part-time job rather than a full-time job this summer, so if it’s only part-time, maybe I can pick up a couple of classes,’” Wolf said.

Steve Carpenter is a spokesperson for Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids. He says enrollment numbers have been climbing for a few years now. Over the past year, the number of Kirkwood students over the age of 25 has jumped 33%. “That has to be a harbinger of things going on in employment, things going on in the economy,” Carpenter told Radio Iowa. “We’ve met many of those students who say ‘yes, I’m facing a lot of life and work decisions and I’ve come to explore new careers.’ That’s definitely been a trend at Kirkwood.”

This summer, more than 8,000 students are enrolled at Kirkwood. That marks a 13% increase over last year. “A lot of the students are what we call ‘reverse transfers’ – they’re students at Iowa, Iowa State, Drake, Luther, Loras…who will be back in the Cedar Rapids or eastern Iowa area for the summer and they’re taking a class or two to stay on track to graduate in four years,” Carpenter said.

Last fall, combined enrollment at Iowa’s 15 community colleges topped the 100,000 mark for the first time in history.

 

Duo from D.C., California in Iowa to talk immigration reform

An immigration reform activist from California and a researcher from a Washington, D.C. think tank that highlights “free market” principles held a series of events in Iowa on Thursday to share the same view: it’s time for a new U.S. policy on immigration.

Dan Griswold, director of the Cato Institute’s Center for Trade Policy Studies, says immigration “has been good” for the State of Iowa. ”This is a state that has a slow-growing population and immigrants have helped to address some labor force issues, but also the citizens of Iowa would be even better off if we had expanded legal immigration,” Griswold says. “We need to change our immigration system so that more workers can enter the country legally.This will reduce illegal immigration and help produce better-paying, middle-class jobs for the citizens of Iowa.”

Raul Hinojosa is founding director of the California-based North American Integration and Development Center.  He hopes Arizona’s new law cracking down on illegal immigrants is a wake-up call to federal policymakers who’ve been unable or unwilling to find a solution.

“We know we needed half-a-million unskilled workers from immigrants for the last 25 years and we only have a legal system of bringing in about 6000 unskilled workers,” Hinojosa says.  “That’s obviously a broken system which is going to lead toward undocumented immigration. We have to move towards a system that makes much more logical sense given our economic needs and our competitive requirements into the 21st century.”

The two men were invited to Iowa by the “Iowa Immigration Education Coalition” and both noted immigration is a topic in “the heartland” partly because of the high-profile immigration raids at meatpacking plants in Postville and Marshalltown. Griswold says those raids illustrate the ongoing labor-market needs of Iowa. 

“Nobody’s in favor of illegal immigration,” Griswold says.  “The best situation would be to change our immigration laws so these workers can enter the U.S. legally in the above-ground economy and help build a stronger, more prosperous Iowa.” 

The two men made four appearances together in Des Moines on Thursday, appearing at a Rotary Club over the lunch hour and in a church last night. “This particular visit, along with my partner Dan Griswold who represents more of a right-leaning think tank and I, who am working with a more Democratic, left-leaning Center for American Progress, it’s extremely important that we both come together because we agree on so many things, come to the heartland, and make this presentation,” Hinojosa says. 

He says it’s clear from his visit to Iowa that there’s sentiment in “the heartland” for immigration reform.