http://media.www.dailytexanonline.com/media/storage/paper410/news/2006/09/08/University/Texas.U.s.Failing.In.Higher.Education.Federal.Report.Says-2263076.shtml?sourcedomain=www.dailytexanonline.com&MIIHost=media.collegepublisher.comTexas, and the nation as a whole, scored poorly on a National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education report published Thursday measuring state-by-state performances. The United States' higher education quality was measured against other countries, including Japan, Germany, Korea and the United Kingdom.
Texas flunked the report's measure of higher education affordability.
Middle- and low-income families are spending a higher percentage of their income on college, the report said. The 40 percent of the population with the lowest income earns an average $18,000 per year. After financial aid, these residents are paying a net college cost of $8,186 a year, nearly 45 percent of their total income, according to the report.An average 14 out of 100 students in Texas complete certificates or degrees, which is 40 percent lower than the United Kingdom's top-performing rate. The proportion of younger adults with a college degree in Texas is 59 percent of the proportion in Japan, the top-performing nation in this category, according to the report.
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Modest improvements have been made in the proportion of students completing degrees and certificates, according to the report. The United States compared "very poorly" with other countries in this category.