Community colleges and four-year universities can work together to improve the transfer student experience, a data report from the U.S. Department of Education suggests.The U.S. Department of Education released data about the institutions where transfer students have the highest graduation rates in each state, with New Jersey, New York, Illinois, Maryland and Virginia doing the best. At the other end were South Dakota, Delaware, Indiana, New Mexico and Louisiana.The announcement of this report came in conjunction with a November summit featuring hundreds of higher education leaders, at Northern Virginia Community College in Annandale, Virginia.#placement_573654_0_i{width:100%;max-width:550px;margin:0 auto;}var rnd = window.rnd || Math.floor(Math.random()*10e6);var pid573654 = window.pid573654 || rnd;var plc573654 = window.plc573654 || 0;var abkw = window.abkw || '';var absrc = 'https://ads.empowerlocal.co/adserve/;ID=181918;size=0x0;setID=573654;type=js;sw='+screen.width+';sh='+screen.height+';spr='+window.devicePixelRatio+';kw='+abkw+';pid='+pid573654+';place='+(plc573654++)+';rnd='+rnd+';click=CLICK_MACRO_PLACEHOLDER';var _absrc = absrc.split("type=js"); absrc = _absrc[0] + 'type=js;referrer=' + encodeURIComponent(document.location.href) + _absrc[1];document.write('');The Department of Education data highlighted an ongoing problem of poor graduation outcomes among college transfer students.While attending community college has become increasingly common for students in recent decades, schools have not accommodated their practices to match this demand, said Josh Wyner, who is a founder and executive director of the College Excellence Program at the Aspen Institute.âWhen community colleges only educated a small percentage of Americans back in the 1950s and before, there just werenât a lot of students that were starting at community college and moving onto a four-year school,â Wyner said.Today, about 40% of all undergraduate students attend community colleges, Wyner said, and most of them plan to earn a bachelorâs degree.In a press release announcing the Northern Virginia summit and data report, U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said there needs to be increased support for transfer students.âOur current higher education system stacks the deck against community college students who aspire to earn four-year degrees â denying acceptance of their credits, forcing them to retake courses, and ultimately making their educational journeys longer and costlier than they need to be,â Cardona said in the press release.Pairing two-year and four-year institutionsThe Department of Education data also focuses on the âdyads,â or community college and four-year institution pairings, that have the highest graduation rates for transfer students.The report particularly highlights the âtop-performingâ partnership between Northern Virginia Community College, known as NOVA, and George Mason Universityâs ADVANCE program. George Mason is a public four-year institution in Fairfax, Virginia.ADVANCE, which launched in 2018, aims to improve the transfer experience and graduation rates for students, said Jennifer Nelson, the director of university transfer and initiatives at NOVA.Of the students who transferred from NOVA to George Mason University, 13% graduated with a bachelorâs degree within eight years, according to the Department of Education.Jason Dodge, the executive director of ADVANCE at George Mason University and NOVA, said there are currently about 4,500 students in the ADVANCE program.Nelson said that when ADVANCE was first developed in 2017, four key goals were defined to help transfer students. These goals âtend to be the hallmarksâ of why students participate in the program, Nelson said.First, the program seeks to increase associateâs and bachelorâs degree attainment for transfer students, since âcompletion leads to completion,â Nelson said. The program aims to decrease the amount of time spent earning a degree, as well as lower the cost to do so, Nelson said.The fourth goal of the program is to increase support for transfer students, including academic advising, Nelson said.Nelson and Dodge said the ADVANCE programâs collaboration between schools is what makes it special.âThis is a 50/50 program,â Nelson said. âEvery decision thatâs made regarding this program is a joint decision.âSupport for transfer studentsNelson said the ADVANCE program offers a âstreamlined admission processâ for community college students seeking to transfer from NOVA to George Mason.Students join the program early in their time at NOVA, before they have completed over 30 credit hours, Nelson said. Transfer students can spend âno more than five minutesâ to complete the ADVANCE programâs free declaration form, Nelson said.The final part of a studentâs onboarding process is to select a curricular pathway, or their major, Nelson said. This pathway serves as a âguideâ for transfer students as they work to earn their associateâs degree and move on to George Mason University, Nelson said.There is also no transfer application or application fee for students in the ADVANCE program, which makes the transition process âseamlessâ for students, Dodge said.ADVANCE offers financial aid specifically for these transfer students, and has so far awarded over $2 million in scholarships and grants to participating students at NOVA and GMU, Dodge said.In addition to having an academic adviser and access to resources at both institutions, students in the ADVANCE program have a coach. This coach âserves as a studentâs primary point of contact for the program,â Nelson said.Nelson said the coach helps make sure the student is sticking to their pathway and taking the right classes, as well as helps connect students to resources at both institutions.These certified coaches recognize âthat what happens outside of the classroom has a direct impact on a studentâs ability to excel inside of the classroom,â Nelson said.Patterns in transfer student dataWyner said he sees âsimilar patternsâ between his research with the Community College Research Center on National Student Clearinghouse data and the Department of Educationâs data.The data collected from the National Student Clearinghouse data represents 90% of college students, which is more inclusive than the Department of Educationâs data report, Wyner said. The Department of Educationâs data only represents students who receive financial aid, he said.Wyner was a presenter at the Department of Educationâs November summit at NOVA.The first pattern, Wyner said, is that both data sets showcase low graduation rates for community college students transferring to four-year universities.The second pattern is âincredibly variable bachelorâs attainment rates among dyads of institutions,â Wyner said, and these variations exist even within state lines.âThat huge variation, even within states, says that what matters is institutional practice,â Wyner said.Wyner said that while state policies can make a difference, itâs concerning that âsome institutions are doing radically better than othersâ within the same state. This is âtroubling,â he said, because a studentâs chance of graduation appears to be tied to the whichever dyad they attend.If a transfer student attends a community college-university pair with lower graduation rates, that student has âa very small chance of getting a bachelorâs degree,â he said.âIt shouldnât be a matter of luck as to where you enter community college, in terms of whether youâre ultimately going to get a bachelorâs degree,â Wyner said.Ensuring successWyner said that after the Pell Grant program was established in the 1970s, community college enrollment âdramatically increasedâ after primarily serving as âaccess institutions.âDespite this surge of community college enrollments, âcolleges fundamentally didnât change their practices,â Wyner said.Community colleges have since been focused on helping students complete their associate degree, but âhavenât worked as hard as they needed to make sure that students succeed after they graduate, that they actually go on to earn the bachelorâs degree that they came for in the first place,â Wyner said.Four-year universities have primarily focused on first-year student enrollments, Wyner said, even though âthe community college population of freshmen and sophomores in our country is as big as the one that starts at four-year schools.ââOur systems have not caught up to the realities of where students enter college,â Wyner said.Four-year universities also prioritize first-year students over transfer students when it comes to financial aid, Wyner said.Steps toward transfer student successWith the Community College Research Center, Wyner has studied the colleges with high and improving success rates of transfer students.These schools demonstrated three characteristics that made this success possible, he said. The colleges prioritize transfer students, create defined programs of study âthat extend from the community college into the four-year school with clear course sequences and strong learning outcomes,â as well as offer advising tailored to transfer students, Wyner said.The first step to improving transfer student success is for leaders at both community colleges and universities to come together and analyze transfer student population data, Wyner said.Wyner said that schools can further prioritize transfer students by bringing together faculty from individual areas of study from both the two year- and four-year colleges for shared discussions. This can help ensure that those programs of study are âperfectly well-alignedâ for a smooth transition from the community college to the four-year college, he said.âThey need to sit down and say, âAlright, weâre gonna map out exactly the courses students should take, and weâre going to work hard together to make sure that weâre aligned on our expectations for students and that weâre delivering what students need,ââ Wyner said. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('ad-1515727'); });
Del Norte Triplicate
Researchers look at how to help more community college students gain four-year degrees
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January 21, 2024 at 08:00 AM
8 min read
3 years ago
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Published January 21, 2024 at 08:00 AM
Reading Time 8 min
Category general