Diploma Diplomacy

El Presidente de NECC Lane Glenn y el Rector de la UASD Iván Grullón firmando un acuerdo comprometiéndose a trabajar juntos para ampliar y mejorar las oportunidades educativas para todos los estudiantes. El Alcalde de Lawrence Daniel Rivera los observa. Lane Glenn, NECC President and the President of the UASD Ivan Grullon signing the agreement to work together to expand and improve educational opportunities for all students. Lawrence Mayor Daniel Rivera observes.
El Presidente de NECC Lane Glenn y el Rector de la UASD Iván Grullón firmando un acuerdo comprometiéndose a trabajar juntos para ampliar y mejorar las oportunidades educativas para todos los estudiantes. El Alcalde de Lawrence Daniel Rivera los observa. Lane Glenn, NECC President and the President of the UASD Ivan Grullon signing the agreement to work together to expand and improve educational opportunities for all students. Lawrence Mayor Daniel Rivera observes.

By Lane Glenn
President of NECC

Jessica Castillo was eighteen years old when she arrived in Lawrence from the Dominican Republic in 2007.

She spoke no English, and worked three jobs, seven days a week, while enrolled in the English-as-a-Second Language (ESL) program at Northern Essex Community College.

A few semesters—and an expanded vocabulary—later, she enrolled in NECC’s iHealth Healthcare Practice Management Program, while working her way up from child care, to the front desk, to office manager at the Lawrence Dental Center.

When she graduated with her Associate Degree last year, she enrolled in an online program at St. Joseph’s College in Maine that accepts up to three years of credits from NECC—so she only had to take her senior year to complete her Bachelor’s degree in Business Management.

Jessica is a real success story.

But for every student like Jessica who overcomes the odds and makes it, many more in and around Lawrence still do not.

While the rest of Massachusetts enjoys the reputation as the most educated state in the nation (more than 40% of adults in the Commonwealth have at least a bachelor’s degree), the residents of Lawrence lag far behind.  According to the United States Census Bureau’s American Community Survey for 2014, only 12% of the adults aged 25 and over in Lawrence have a bachelor’s degree or higher.

This is a serious educational, economic, and workforce development challenge.

And opportunity.

 

In a city of nearly 80,000 residents, where 74% of the population is Hispanic—mostly from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico—and faces daily challenges with language, employment, education, poverty, and a host of other barriers, more young people than ever before are finding their way into college.

Three years ago, in 2013, 69% of Hispanic high school graduates went to college in the United States, passing the rate of white high school graduates going to college (67%) for the first time.

The same thing is happening in Lawrence.

Over the last five years, the number of students graduating from Lawrence High School and enrolling at NECC in the fall has doubled; and, despite recent enrollment declines at community colleges across the country, NECC’s Lawrence campus is holding steady at over 3,000 students—an increase of nearly 30% over the last ten years.  Over 60% of those students, about 2,000 altogether, are Hispanic, mostly from the Dominican Republic.

These are encouraging signs, indeed.

And yet…

Despite some important gains in “closing the gaps” between minority and majority student success over the last ten years through NECC’s work in Achieving the Dream, Title V, and other initiatives, the retention, completion, and graduation rates of our Hispanic students remain lower than they should be.

These students face extra challenges while pursuing their education.  The English language remains a significant barrier for many.  Even those been born in the U.S. may have been raised in households where Spanish is the primary language spoken, and as a result, they may not be completely fluent in either language.

Many of them are the first in their families to attend college, which often means they struggle financially, may not have the same supports as other students, and frequently have family responsibilities that conflict with academic responsibilities.

And to further complicate their pursuit of a college degree, many residents of Lawrence with roots in the Dominican Republic find themselves traveling back and forth frequently in support of family needs.

Then there are the residents of Lawrence (and other communities in the state) who may have completed classes or entire degrees at colleges in other countries, like the Dominican Republic; but those degrees have not been validated in the United States and are not recognized by employers here.

As a result, some immigrant professionals, including teachers, doctors, dentists, and engineers, may find themselves working in much lower-paying service industry jobs as waitresses, janitors, and cab drivers.

For all these reasons and many more, last week I traveled to the Dominican Republic with a delegation of educators and elected officials, including NECC’s Executive Director of Lawrence Campus and Community Relations, Dr. Noemi Custodia-Lora, Lawrence Mayor Daniel Rivera, and Massachusetts State Representative Marcos Devers.

Our goal?

To create as many opportunities as possible for students in either Massachusetts or the Dominican Republic to complete their education at NECC or a Dominican college or university.

If we are successful, many people will benefit from more education, a better prepared workforce, and higher standards of living in what today are impoverished and disadvantaged communities—in both countries.

While poor by U.S. standards, the Dominican Republic is the largest economy in the Caribbean and Central American region, and over the last twenty years, the nation has been moving from agriculture and mining toward telecommunications and a booming service industry.

One sure sign of an emerging modern economy in this nation of 10 million people is an increased focus on the importance of education at every level.

Long suffering from one of the worst education systems in the region, the voters of the Dominican Republic convinced their candidates for president in 2012 to promise, if elected, to double the education budget for primary and secondary grades.

Instituto Técnico Superior Comunitario (ITSC), also known as San Luis Community College, the first community college in the country, which opened its doors in 2012. El Instituto Técnico Superior Comunitario (ITSC), también conocido como el Colegio Comunitario de San Luis, el primero en el país, el cual abrió sus puertas en el 2012.
Instituto Técnico Superior Comunitario (ITSC), also known as San Luis Community College, the first community college in the country, which opened its doors in 2012.
El Instituto Técnico Superior Comunitario (ITSC), también conocido como el Colegio Comunitario de San Luis, el primero en el país, el cual abrió sus puertas en el 2012.

President Danilo Medina is following through on his campaign pledge, and has doubled spending on education from 2% to 4% of the DR’s Gross Domestic Product.  In dollar terms, that’s a big boost, from $1 billion to just over $2 billion last year.

At the same time, the Dominican Republic has been investing in higher education, and seeing some significant progress.

The nation is home to the oldest university in the western hemisphere.  The Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo was founded by a papal decree of Pope Paul III in 1538.

In 1960, more than 400 years later, it was still the only university operating in the country, and it enrolled 3,700 students.

Now, just fifty years later, there are 46 colleges and universities enrolling nearly 400,000 students, and the government has set a target of increasing participation in higher education to 50 percent of the college age population—about 660,000 students—by 2018.

Even as more students are finding their way onto campuses in the DR, the number of Dominican students travelling internationally for higher education has also increased by more than 50% over the last eight years.  Now, nearly 4,000 students from the DR study abroad each year—mostly in the United States and Spain, and often on government-funded scholarship programs.

Under a new 10-year plan for higher education in the Dominican Republic, 10,000 international scholarships—across all levels—will be awarded for study at foreign universities in key areas for national development and competitiveness.

And get this:  That plan also calls for the creation of something brand new to the island nation—community colleges.

            Our visit last week included a tour and a partnership agreement signing ceremony with the Instituto Técnico Superior Comunitario (ITSC), also known as San Luis Community College, the first community college in the country, which opened its doors in 2012, already enrolls 3,700 students, and just bestowed degrees on their first class of 115 graduates.

According to Victor Hugo De Láncer, the founding Rector (president) of ITSC, it was the largest infrastructure investment the country had made since the creation of the Santo Domingo Metro System, which just began running public transit trains in 2009.

The 200,000 square foot ITSC campus (about half the size of NECC’s Haverhill campus) includes 13 buildings of classrooms, laboratories, offices, an auditorium, library, and other spaces built at a cost of $1.8 billion Dominican Pesos, about $38 million—and it is already making a tremendous difference in San Luis, where small shops and new houses are being built nearby, in neighborhoods once entirely filled with shacks, abandoned bodegas, and rubble.

An hour or so north of San Luis, in the poor, rural province of Monte Plata, we met with a group of local residents, elected officials, and educators who are eager to launch the country’s second community college—and hopeful that NECC might work with them as a “big brother” in their effort.

Their province may not have much.  Farming and some tourism are the dominant industries, and motorcycles, bicycles, and burros far outnumber cars on the rough roads; but, like most communities in the DR, they have a place to play baseball, and this citizens committee is excited about the idea of building a community college, along with an elementary school, a high school, and dormitories around their prized athletic complex in what they dream will become a “City of Knowledge” for generations to come.

The final stop on our visit was the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo, affectionately known to the nearly 200,000 students across the country as UASD (pronounced “Wazzed”).

Many Dominicans in the United States, including our very own State Representative Marcos Devers, are graduates of UASD, and a lot of NECC students arrive with credits from one of the university’s 18 campuses.

Last August, Dr. Clara Benedicto, UASD Director of International Relations, visited NECC’s Lawrence campus and took part in a historic signing ceremony between our two institutions.

On this trip to the DR, we completed our pact.  In front of a packed room of UASD faculty and staff, and a large group of newspaper and television reporters, Dr. Custodia-Lora and I, along with UASD Rector Iván Grullón and Lawrence Mayor Daniel Rivera, presented remarks and signed an agreement pledging to work together to expand and improve educational opportunities for all of our students and the communities we serve.

In the months and years ahead, our hope is that these new partnerships will lead to faculty and staff cultural exchanges, simpler transfer of credits between colleges and universities, improved English-as-a-Second Language opportunities for Dominican immigrants in and around Lawrence, a simplified process for verifying college degrees from other countries, and expanded online enrollment in NECC courses—all of which can go a long way toward increasing the number of adults in Lawrence with a college degree and making the city more competitive in the regional economy.

And maybe, just maybe, in a true demonstration of international cooperation and the value of academics and student engagement…

Spring training and an exhibition game between the NJCAA World Series contender Northern Essex Community College Knights and the Liga de Beisbol UASD Resinto Santiago.

Let’s play ball!