Facing Pressure on Enrollment, Will Colleges Support More Transfer Students?
Only a portion of community college students obtain bachelors degrees. “Right now, the status quo is that supports and advising for transfer students is too little, and too late, and really too absent the presence of the four-year partner,” John Fink told EdSurge.
How to Help Students Avoid ‘Random Acts of Dual Credit’
A report released earlier this month found dual credit programs often end up “random acts of dual credit,” meaning those courses on paper could fit into a wide variety of degree programs. John Fink told EdWeek, “We need to not just offer any dual-enrollment courses, but high-quality dual-enrollment courses that are well taught and aligned to students’ interests after high school.”
Multiple Measures, Better Outcomes
Inside Higher Ed reports on a recent CAPR study that shows that using multiple measures to decide whether students belong in remedial coursework, instead of using standard placement exams, results in more students taking and succeeding in college-level English and math courses.
Growing Enrollment, Shrinking Future
According to enrollment data from the National Student Clearinghouse, total college enrollment rates are up for the first time since 2020, especially at community colleges. Thomas Brock told Inside Higher Ed that some of the more dramatic increases can be attributed to two-year institutions climbing out of the deep post-pandemic hole. The 74 also reported on the data.
Boom Time for Maine’s Community Colleges
Enrollment in the state's two-year system hit an all-time high this fall, despite national declines and the state’s aging population. John Fink told Inside Higher Ed that the big takeaway from Maine is that the state is delivering "not just a promise to students [of free college], but a pathway to get them there."
WA Colleges Help Transfer Students Chart a Path to Four-Year Degrees
With the present transfer system, gaps in transfer success are inevitable, John Fink told The Seattle Times. “In so many ways, we’ve set this up not to work for students."
A DEEPer Approach to Dual Enrollment
For dual enrollment to be transformational at scale, it needs a revamped strategic approach that aligns better with students’ interests and potential career pathways, and expands access to underserved students, Community College Daily reports.
Dual-Credit Programs Are Growing, But Do They Reach the Students Who Need Them Most?
“We need to build and tap into students’ motivation,” John Fink told EducationWeek about rethinking dual credit courses. "If you’re going to broaden access to dual enrollment, you also have to up the supports to make sure students succeed and do well in these courses.”
Dual Enrollment Is Exploding. How Can Colleges Make Sure It’s Equitable?
“You can’t have equity without quality,” John Fink told The Chronicle of Higher Education about dual enrollment course offerings. “You can’t just try to broaden access and not give students a good-quality, well-aligned dual-enrollment course. That’s not doing anybody any favors.”
Equity-Focused Possibilities for Dual Enrollment
“These are programs of privilege,” John Fink told Inside Higher Ed. “The mind-set that educators bring to them and the way that policies are set up reinforces the idea that dual-enrollment courses are advanced courses for students who are already on the college track."