A POST-ELECTION TEMPERATURE CHECK — College presidents are bracing for uncertainty. President-elect Donald Trump has promised to address everything from their accreditation to dismantling the Education Department, but has yet to fill in the details on just how he’ll do it. — Arizona State University President Michael Crow last week hosted his 37th Annual Higher Education-News Media Dinner-Discussion at the University of Pennsylvania Club of New York City. Attendees included: University of California Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons; Lewis and Clark College President Robin Holmes-Sullivan; University of Maryland System Chancellor Jay A. Perman; University of Utah President Taylor Randall; College of William and Mary President Katherine A. Rowe; University of Colorado Boulder Chancellor Justin Schwartz; Fordham University President Tania Tetlow; Boise State University President Marlene Tromp; University of California Riverside Chancellor Kim Wilcox; and S. David Wu, president of Baruch College, The City University of New York Here’s what some of them had to say … On Trump’s promise to abolish the Education Department: — University of Colorado Boulder President Justin Schwartz said there is still a lot of uncertainty about the president-elect’s proposal. “To me, the question on the Department of Education is what happens to all its contents?” he said. “Because so many things in there — even if you didn't have a Department of Education — would still exist in some other form. Like what would happen to the Office of Civil Rights, for example, that has such a big impact on many things that we do?” — Arizona State University President Michael Crow said the agency is overdue for a revamp. “The Department of Education is a mismatch of bank feeds that have been cobbled together over 50 years of congressional history or more,” Crow said. “If you look at the United States and our success, we have almost three quarters of a trillion dollars being spent on Pell Grants in the last few decades, and more than half of those individuals have never graduated from college.” “Most of the people that have loans supported by the government of the United States have no diplomas, no certificates, no degrees of any kind,” Crow added. “Clearly, something is not yet perfected and so what we need is new designs, new models, new ways of doing things.” On issuing statements on current events: — Institutional neutrality seems to still be the trend. Fordham University President Tania Tetlow said while she issued a statement to encourage her students to vote, she's not going to issue “any partisan statements at risk of further dividing us” or weigh in on other events that don’t immediately affect her campus community or university mission. “On the one hand, we have a lot more cover not to issue such statements,” she said. “On the other hand, a lot of what happens is our community — in a sense of vulnerability — wants us as the parent to comfort them and make it all better. And we don't have that power. We have to admit to them that actually no one in Israel is waiting for my foreign policy declarations on cease-fire. They actually don't care.” On which Trump education proposals have them concerned: — “My nightmare is linking federal financial aid funding to what we can and cannot teach about diversity, equity and inclusion,” Tetlow said. “As I look at some of the statutes in the states which are aimed at publics — but there's no reason they couldn't link funding to privates — it has vague language, like the banning of that which inspires collective guilt, which, as a Catholic university, is core to our beliefs,” she said jokingly. “They're so vague in statutes that it would make it impossible to comply, even if you were willing to.” —”My biggest concern is that they use the accreditation process to manipulate curriculum,” Schwartz said. “Manipulate what we can teach and what we can't teach.” IT’S MONDAY, NOV. 25. WELCOME TO WEEKLY EDUCATION. Let’s grab coffee. Drop me a line at bquilantan@politico.com. Send tips to my colleagues Rebecca Carballo at rcarballo@politico.com, Mackenzie Wilkes at mwilkes@politico.com and Juan Perez Jr. at jperez@politico.com. And follow us: @Morning_Edu and @POLITICOPro.
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