League for Innovation in the Community College January 2019 | Page 8

COMMUNITY COL Historical and Contemporary Fixation Upon Access T he traditional mission of the community college flows out of several principles and characteristics of the institution, its local communities, and its students. These principles have included the community nature or orientation of the institution—derived in part from the Truman (or President’s) Commission’s 1947 report, Higher Education for Democracy—which tied the community college to national democratic aspirations, found in terms such as “democracy’s college” and “democracy’s open door.” Other non-elitist characteristics, such as the comprehensive curriculum, student 8 League for Innovation in the Community College Innovatus From Access focus, and community orientation, have served, for decades, to provide a foundation for the mission of the institution. From these democratic aspirations, the open-access nature of the community college was and remains the prime identifiable characteristic of community colleges. Indeed, the access principle—open access to further education and training for adults (and those adolescents who aspire to postsecondary education)—is central to all community colleges, and no doubt is implicit in the community college mission and in community college mission statements.