NHPTV To Air "Declining by Degrees: Higher Education at Risk"

Engaging Minds | Connecting Communities | Celebrating New Hampshire

(DURHAM, June 16, 2005) – How good is higher education in America today? The competition for admission into certain highly selective colleges and universities may be greater than ever, but the vast majority of American college students don’t attend those schools. Even if they did, the same question arises: Does the reality of higher education measure up to the dream of millions of individuals and to the educational needs of the nation? Declining By Degrees: Higher Education at Risk explores these questions. The documentary airs on New Hampshire Public Television, Friday, June 24 @ 8 p.m., and again Sunday, June 26 @ 2 p.m. Set on four different college campuses across the country — a private liberal arts college, a major state university, a regional public university and a community college — this special examines both the promise and the peril in higher education today. The program premieres in the midst of a growing national concern about the quality of higher education, fueled in part by an increasing preoccupation with college rankings, grade inflation, declining academic standards and overall concerns about the quality and readiness of America’s workforce. Viewers will go behind the scenes of American higher education to experience college through the eyes of students, parents, professors and college administrators. Among the seven on-air advisors to the program is Richard H. Hersh, former provost and vice president for Academic Affairs at the University of New Hampshire. Reported and narrated by Peabody Award-winning correspondent John Merrow, the program illuminates crucial issues about the quality of higher education in the United States. For more information about the program, visit the Declining By Degrees Web site. Beyond its award-winning local and national television programs, New Hampshire Public Television is a leader in education and community outreach. NHPTV provides instructional services for 206,000 students from kindergarten through high school; offers Ready To Learn programs and services for children preschool to age 8, parents, and early education professionals; and provides professional development programs and advanced technology training for educators in New Hampshire and neighboring states. For more information about NHPTV programs that entertain, educate and enrich, visit www.nhptv.org.


Return to the
About New Hampshire PBS
Main Page

NHPBS is a 501(c)3 multi-media, educational non-profit organization governed by a local Board of Directors. As the only statewide, locally owned and operated PBS member station, five transmitters carry the station’s signal to 98% of the Granite State, (and beyond). Over 200,000 students annually benefit from NHPBS' free, curriculum-aligned, educational services, while hundreds of thousands of online visitors access information and interactive content. NHPBS engages audiences via community screenings and events that spark meaningful dialogue and community connection throughout the Granite State. The station receives no state funding and is supported by nearly 22,000 members.

TV | MOBILE | ONLINE | CLASSROOMS | COMMUNITY

For over sixty years, NHPBS has provided the residents of New Hampshire and Northern New England with the best of PBS and award-winning local programs. To this day, the station remains committed to a handful of time-tested tenets: commercial free programming that engages minds, connects communities, and celebrates the Granite State in a way that entertains as well as educates and has impact beyond the broadcast. NHPBS is valued by its viewers for providing high quality, educational programming that can’t be found anywhere else. PBS and its member stations, like NHPBS, has been voted the #1 trusted brand in America for 14 consecutive years by the American public (Source: Roper Poll).

NHPBS | NHPBS EXPLORE | NH CREATE | NH WORLD | NHPBS KIDS 24/7

We love connecting with our viewers! Let us know what you love to watch. E-mail us with your ideas and comments. Stay connected with New Hampshire PBS!



Station Management

Peter A. Frid
President & CEO
pfrid@nhpbs.org
603-868-1100

Dawn DeAngelis
Vice President & Chief Content Officer
ddeangelis@nhpbs.org
603-868-1100

Connect With NHPBS

email

Email

Your ideas, comments and questions are important to us.

Facebook

Facebook

Facebook makes it easy for you to connect and share with your family, friends and us online.

Twitter

X

X (formerly Twitter) is an online social networking service that enables its users to send and read text-based messages.

Instagram

Instagram

Instagram is a fun and quirky way to share your life with friends through a series of pictures.

Follow us on Instagram.

Flickr

flickr

Flickr is an image hosting and sharing service and community.

Follow us on Flickr.

YouTube

YouTube

YouTube is a video-sharing website on which users can upload, share, and view videos.

Subscribe to us on YouTube.