President Barack Obama announced perhaps his most sweeping secondary education proposal ever on Friday, saying that he planned to present Congress with an ambitious plan that would make a two-year community college education free for all Americans.
“I’m announcing an ambitious new plan to bring down the cost of college tuition in America,” Obama said during a speech at Pellissippi State Community College in Knoxville, Tenn. “I want to bring it down to zero.”
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Calling community colleges an “essential pathway to the middle class,” the president said that he would send his plan to Congress in the coming weeks and that the issue of offering a quality education to all Americans is non-partisan.
“Higher education shouldn’t be a Democratic issue or a Republican issue. It’s an American issue,” he added.
Obama began his speech on Friday afternoon by addressing the terrorist attacks this week in France, calling the country “our oldest ally.”
“I want the people of France to know that the United States stands with you today, stands with you tomorrow,” he said.
The president initially unveiled his free community college plan, called America’s College Promise, on Thursday in a video posted to Facebook. Obama said that to qualify for the program students must attend community college at least half-time and maintain at least a 2.5 grade point average.
According to the White House, the proposal would cost the federal government $60 billion over 10 years.
In a press call on Thursday, White House policy director Cecilia Munoz said the proposal is tantamount to earlier ambitious American education shifts that changed the landscape of the nation.
“This is the moment that is equivalent to the moment that we made high school universal,” Munoz said.
According to the White House, Obama’s proposal could benefit about 9 million students a year and save a full-time community college student an average of $3,800 a year in tuition.
In his speech, President Obama said that the program could help non-traditional students, working parents and those unable to afford sometimes hefty 4-year degree programs. He said it could also help women and minorities gain access to the science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) sectors, which they’ve historically been underrepresented.
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“It can be a game changer,” said the president. “Students who started at community colleges during those two years and then go on to a four year institution, they essentially get half of their bachelors degree free.”
President Obama allowed that the plan comes with certain responsibilities for students, schools and states.
The federal government would cover about three-quarters of the cost of qualified students two-year education and that the remainder would be picked up by states that choose to participate. In addition, participating community colleges would be required to offer credits that are transferable to public four-year colleges.
“There are no free rides in America,” Obama said. “You’re going to have to earn it.”









