Report: Guided Pathways Show Progress
A new report from the Center for Community College Student Engagement found that, though there is still room for improvement, guided pathways has improved the student experience on many campuses. CCRC Senior Research Scholar Davis Jenkins told Inside Higher Ed that in order to keep making progress, colleges must focus on moving past program mapping as an end goal and implement engagement strategies such as experiential learning opportunities. Jenkins also spoke to Diverse: Issues in Higher Education and University Business about the report.
Reform Advocates Urge Colleges and Universities to Stop Asking Prospective Students About Their Criminal Histories
CCRC Senior Research Scholar Judith Scott-Clayton spoke to the Oklahoma State Legislature about why colleges should cease asking prospective students about their criminal histories, Tulsa World reports. Campuses, Scott-Clayton explained, tend to be very safe places, and asking students for this information could discourage some from pursuing higher education.
Higher Ed’s Most Successful Failure
With its wraparound services and high-touch approach, CUNY's ASAP program has demonstrated its ability to improve students' likelihood of graduation and transfer to a four-year institution. However, as CCRC Director Tom Brock explains in this Washington Monthly story, ASAP hasn't been widely adopted due to the harsh realities of states' budgeting processes.
An Essential Education for All Students
This Inside Higher Ed opinion piece, which draws from the book Redesigning America’s Community Colleges, argues that for years, higher education initiatives failed to prioritize community college curricular reform, and the pandemic has made the consequences of that omission clear.
University-Bound Students Change Course to Lorain County Community College; Research Says They Might Be Better Off
This Morning Journal story about students opting to attend Lorain County Community College in Ohio instead of four-year universities cites CCRC research that found students who enroll primarily in four-year institutions but take a limited number of courses at the two-year level benefit from doing so. Spectrum News 1 also published a story on Lorain that relies on CCRC's work.
As More Four-Year Colleges Flip Online, Some Students Take a Second Look at Community Colleges
CCRC Senior Research Scholar Davis Jenkins told WGBH that he doubts high school graduates' newfound interest in community colleges as an alternative to four-year universities will be enough to offset dips in enrollment across the sector. Some students intending to earn their bachelor's degrees are considering diverting to two-year institutions as a stopgap during the coronavirus pandemic.
Displaced Workers and Public College Enrollment
Inside Higher Ed describes a new National Bureau of Economic Research working paper written by CCRC's Judith Scott-Clayton and Veronica Minaya that examines the relationship between mass layoffs and public college enrollment. The researchers found that for every 100 workers who lose their job, just one enrolls at a public college.
4-Year Students Can Benefit From Community College Classes, New Research Suggests
Education Dive describes CCRC's latest working paper, which finds educational and employment benefits for four-year college students who take a limited number of community college credits.
Community College Courses and the Bachelor's Degree
Inside Higher Ed summarizes CCRC's latest working paper on how taking a limited number of community college credits affects the outcomes of students primarily enrolled in four-year institutions. CCRC researchers found that these "supplementally enrolled" students see employment and educational benefits from taking courses at two-year colleges.
Four-Year College Students Benefit From Taking Some Community College Courses
This Community College Daily story summarizes CCRC's latest working paper, which explores how taking a limited number of community college courses affects the educational and employment outcomes of students primarily enrolled in four-year institutions.