INDIANAPOLIS —
The Indiana General Assembly is moving ahead on efforts to contain college costs, which have risen more than 100 percent over the last decade.
The House and Senate both approved legislation that streamlines the college credit transfer process, in part by requiring a common course numbering system that all state public universities would have to follow.
The goal is to make it easier for college students to know if costly course credits will transfer to another university before the student shells out the money to pay for them.
Rep. Mike Karickhoff, R-Kokomo, who carried the bill in the House, described it as a “student-friendly bill” that compels universities to be more cooperative.
The bill also requires state-funded institutions to have at least 30 “general education” credit hours that are compatible with the curriculum at any state school. Students earning an associate degree at Ivy Tech Community College, for example, would have an easier time getting those college credit hours to transfer to a four-year state university.
The bill passed with broad bipartisan support; of the 150 legislators in the General Assembly, only two voted against it. The bill is on its way to Gov. Mitch Daniels’ desk for his signature.
Meanwhile, the state Senate has passed an amended version of a House bill that allows the Indiana Commission for Higher Education to approve or disapprove degree programs, both new and existing, that require more than 60 credit hours for an associate’s degree and 120 hours for a bachelor’s degree.
The legislation, dubbed the “credit creep bill,” was on Daniels’ legislative priority list.
It came in response to universities that had been increasing the number of credit hours required to earn a degree; in turn, students were having to more pay more money and delay their graduation.
Sen. Jean Leising, R-Oldenburg, who sponsored the bill in the Senate, said some degree programs were becoming unattainable for some students, since state student financial aid dollars are only available for the eight semesters it typically takes to earn 120 credit hours.
“It makes it nearly impossible for some students to complete their degrees,” Leising said.
The bill is aimed at improving the state’s college-completion rates. Less than one-third of students in Indiana’s four-year public universities graduate on time.
Maureen Hayden covers the Statehouse for the CNHI newspapers in Indiana.
State News
College credit transfer bill awaits governor’s signature
- State News
-
-
Howard County hospital acquisition clears another hurdle
The planned acquisition of Howard County Regional Health System by the Indianapolis-based Community Health Network cleared another hurdle Tuesday, when the Indiana Finance Authority OK’d the transfer of the Howard County hospital’s debt obligations to Community Health.
-
Mall-based schools offer second chance for at-risk students
Jayne Carter spends her mornings at a shopping mall earning her high school degree. It may sound like a teenager’s dream, but for Carter, 18, and her classmates, it’s a second chance.
-
Maureen Hayden: Why did 3 million Hoosiers choose not to vote?
If you voted in last Tuesday’s primary, raise your hand. Congratulations. You’re part of the small minority of Hoosiers who exercised a right that citizens around the world covet deeply and for which many still risk their lives. For those of you with your hands down, here’s a question: Where were you?
-
Early intervention efforts try to prevent future dropouts
West Goshen Elementary has become a national model for a teaching-excellence program funded by public and private sources, the Teacher Advancement Program, or TAP.
-
3 brothers sentenced in Midwest human smuggling
Federal prosecutors in Indianapolis say three brothers have been sentenced to prison for running an operation that smuggled women into the United States and forced them into prostitution throughout the Midwest.
-
Making lemonade out of Lemons
Press Pass
-
Lugar, Mourdock in final push for voters
Inside his campaign headquarters in Indianapolis, there’s a photo of U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar shaking hands with former U.S. Secretary Condoleeza Rice, one of the many Republican Party heavyweights who’ve endorsed his re-election.
-
Maureen Hayden: Lugar running his toughest race Tuesday
You may think 80 is old, but U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar, who hit that mile marker in April, has this message for people who think he needs to retire: I can still run.
-
Early voting, including absentee ballots, declines from 2008
Indiana’s hotly contested Republican Senate primary race has generated more than $12 million in campaign spending, including a record-topping $4 million in outside dollars.
-
Making Medora movie
Press Pass
-
Emergency stage rules approved
Even before the state’s new emergency rules covering outdoor stage equipment went into effect, the small town of Orleans felt their impact.
-
Memorial service honors workers killed on job
On Monday, Kelley Magill made her first visit to the memorial to honor her brother, Daniel Weger, a 31-year-old husband and father of three from Terre Haute who was killed in a work-related accident last June.
-
Evidence shows public corruption cases hard to prove
As part of his promise to make public corruption one of his top prosecution priorities, U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett has set up a hot line for anonymous whistle blowers.
-
New task force aims to root out public corruption
Criminal violations of the public’s trust will be investigated by a new Public Corruption Working Group comprised of multiple federal and state agencies.
-
State steps up efforts on stage safety
Fair and festival organizers throughout the state should expect more scrutiny of their outdoor entertainment venues this summer, even before new emergency stage regulations kick in.
-
Daniels addressing group pushing for safer stages
Gov. Mitch Daniels is taking Indiana’s lessons from last summer’s deadly State Fair stage collapse to an entertainment industry group that’s pushing for safer outdoor venues.
-
Beard continues to win
Stacey Latovia wasn’t your typical Russian tennis phenom, In fact, she wasn’t even Russian — and her name wasn’t really Latovia. But that name still makes North Daviess senior tennis player Stacey Beard smile.
-
Too late to change
Press Pass
-
Ruling in mo-ped case could drive new law
State law prohibits motorists with suspended driving privileges from getting back on the road, but an Indiana man is arguing that the mo-ped he rode down a state highway at 42 miles an hour isn’t covered by the law.
-
Indiana State Police to crack down on seat belt use
Indiana State Police will be watching for motorists who don’t wear their seat belts during special patrols over the next four weeks.
-
Indiana loses as more states gamble on casino revenues
Ohio’s first casino, combined with three more casinos soon to open in the Buckeye state, will generate 7,500 permanent jobs, 9,700 temporary construction jobs, and $600 million annually in tax revenues statewide. But Ohio’s windfall spells trouble for Indiana.
-
Trying to find my Cub-ness again
The Press Pass
-
Ex-bank executive to take over Indiana revenue office
A former bank executive will take the helm of Indiana’s embattled revenue department.
-
"Z" to return to Hatchet House
Which is better, seeing Tyler Zeller in the Hatchet House as high school All-American — or a college All-American? Fans can decide for themselves on Saturday night.
-
Apparent intruder fatally shot in Fort Wayne
Police in Fort Wayne say an apartment resident fatally shot a man who the resident told officers had kicked in the door to the home.
-
After dull debate, GOP Senate race turns to ground game
Richard Mourdock said he was hoping for a Lincoln-Douglas-style debate with incumbent Sen. Richard Lugar — the kind that brings sharp issues into critical focus and propels a little-known candidate toward fame. Instead, he got what one political observer called “a valuable service to insomniacs everywhere.”
-
Report: Collapsed Indiana fair stage didn’t meet code
An engineering review released today found that the stage rigging that collapsed and killed seven people during last summer’s Indiana State Fair wasn’t built strong enough to meet state building codes.
-
Debate a civil war of words
Voters who tuned in to the lone debate between longtime U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar and his tea party opponent, Richard Mourdock, may have been disappointed if they expected to see a heated battle.
-
'Sextortion' suspect remains in federal custody
A Clay County man accused of possibly the largest case of online sexual extortion of minors in the nation will remain in federal custody awaiting trial.
-
Police fear 'sextortion' becoming more common
Federal authorities say extortion using sexual images is a growing crime as predators exploit the rise of social media and the prevalence of a “sexting” culture that leads teens and children alike to think it’s okay to text or transmit naked images of themselves into the virtual world.
- More State News Headlines
-
Howard County hospital acquisition clears another hurdle




