Wesley Whistle
Project Director, Higher Education
This blog is part of a series about student transfer in higher education and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on transfer students. You can read more here.
More than a transfer institutions at some point while enrolled in higher education. Some transfer from a community college to a four-year institution, others transfer between four-year colleges, and some even transfer from a four-year to a two-year. Transferring colleges is a complicated process, and students often lose credits when they do, wasting time and money. For example, a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that transfer students lost an average of of their credits. That amounts to an average of 13 credits lost, the equivalent of a semester鈥檚 worth of courses. Transfer outcomes were better for students attending public colleges, but students transferring from a public two-year college to a public four-year university still lost an average of of their earned credits. But even when credits do transfer, it doesn鈥檛 mean that students鈥 progress towards their degree won鈥檛 be stymied. Often, colleges and universities will accept credits as electives, but won鈥檛 count them towards general education or major requirements.
Students who transfer deserve a good shot at success and colleges should do all they can to make it a smooth process. Public colleges, especially those in a statewide system, are in a unique position to leverage their power to improve their transfer policies effectively through coordination and their impact can be significant due to their scale. Both the schools and states also have an obligation to use their system to make transferring as seamless as possible for students. The coronavirus pandemic has upended higher education, forcing institutions to close dorms and move instruction online. The pandemic may have caused some to pause their plans to transfer and caused others to alter their higher education plans with the hope of transferring later. While it is still unknown how the pandemic will affect students鈥 decisions around transferring, the process needs to be improved.
There are a number of different policies that have been enacted over the years to improve transfer. Of course, problems still persist鈥攅ven where those policies exist鈥攂ut these efforts can make a difference. Here, we have outlined some strategies for states and systems to improve the process going forward. These ideas are the bare minimum for states and systems, but it is a starting place for better serving students. To truly achieve a better, more equitable transfer experience for students, institutions must take up the torch and enact change.
Guaranteed Transfer Credit Acceptance
A community college is part of the path to a four-year degree for many students鈥攁ccording to research from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, about of incoming community college students say they want to go on to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree or higher. Transferring from a two-year to a four-year college shouldn鈥檛 be a difficult process. One strategy that have adopted is to require their public postsecondary institutions to accept a core of lower-division general education course credits from other public institutions in the state. require that public universities accept all credits from a student that transfers with an associate degree from a public college in their state. A majority of those states also require that those students be deemed as having fulfilled the destination institution鈥檚 general education requirements and grant them upper-class standing. Unfortunately, in both situations, some states allow schools to require those students to complete additional general education requirements beyond what the community college required, causing students to take more courses that won鈥檛 count towards their major.
Recommendation: States and postsecondary systems should enact policies that guarantee students will receive the credit for any of the courses taken for their general education core or their associates degree if they have completed one. Public colleges and universities should additionally consider students who transfer with an associate degree from community college in the same state as having fulfilled the destination school鈥檚 general education requirements.
Credit Articulation Transparency
While helpful, guaranteeing that lower-division credits or all associate degrees transfer still isn鈥檛 enough in many cases. How those credits count makes a significant impact on a student鈥檚 path towards a degree. Some students鈥 credits might transfer, but they still find that the credits don鈥檛 count towards major requirements or even the gateway courses required for admission to a major 鈥 costing them time and money to retake courses or for additional ones. As the , 鈥渁 biology course may count as a general science elective but not count toward the science requirement for a degree in biology.鈥 When students transfer from one institution to another, registrars鈥 offices are tasked with identifying what incoming credits translate to at the institution. Because colleges and universities often use different course names, numbers, and descriptions, it can become difficult to understand what the equivalent course is at the receiving institution.
One policy states have adopted to address this is common-course numbering, where states and colleges identify equivalent courses鈥攗sually at the lower-division level鈥攁nd assign them the same course number. This helps students know that, for example, English 101 at the community college is the same as English 101 at the regional four-year college. As of February 2020, at least have adopted statewide common-course numbering. In California, beyond lower-division courses, statute requires California Community Colleges and the California State University system to have common-course numbering for the 20 majors in highest-demand. (However, California doesn鈥檛 require the University of California system to adopt the course numbering. That gap in policy can have major equity implications, particularly for the 2.1 million students enrolled in California鈥檚 community colleges.)
While other states may not have adopted common-course numbering, 15 have essentially done so by creating course equivalency databases, mapping, or crosswalks so that colleges and students know the equivalent courses at colleges within each state. Another nine states have either common-course numbering or an equivalency database, but only for either their two- or four-year college systems. Though they lack statewide policies, some states or schools have worked to integrate systems with individual schools. For example, the Kentucky Community and Technical College System adopted common course numbering, but also created at certain public universities outlining what courses will satisfy requirements for certain popular degrees. And the state created a website called 鈥溾 to help show some of the degree pathways at public colleges.
An example of this in play at a larger scale is the program managed by the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE). The Passport program could be described as a mega-articulation agreement between dozens of institutions that helps students transfer between member institutions within and across state lines. The program boasts participation from 59 institutions across 17 states. Unlike other articulation agreements, which tend to be course- or credit-centric, this program facilitates the block transfer of all lower-division general education based on student learning outcomes. Students earn a Passport if they score a C or better in a class, and the Passport matches 63 learning outcomes that match general education requirements. While institutions identify what courses match the Passport, it does not guarantee admittance into schools, programs, or degrees.
Recommendation: States and public systems should move to adopt common-course numbering to make transferring a transparent, simpler process. The more courses with common numbering, the better. But if common-course numbering is not feasible or not an option policymakers want to pursue, at a minimum they should create course equivalency databases to make transferring smoother.
Still, colleges will often have differing course offerings and requirements for majors. Guaranteed credit transfer and common-course numbering won鈥檛 fully prevent students from 鈥渓osing鈥 credits taken for their major as electives. Systems 鈥 and states when possible 鈥 should also work to align the requirements of majors, particularly the most popular ones. And when alignment isn鈥檛 possible, they should work to ensure students鈥 receive as much credit as possible towards their major. (On an institutional level, registrars鈥 offices and academic departments should also give students the benefit of the doubt when making the determination of whether a course counts towards a major requirement.)
Reverse Transfer
One study of transfer students found that more than who transferred to a four-year institution hadn鈥檛 earned an associate degree or certificate before transfer. It鈥檚 understandable because their end goal is often a four-year degree. But life happens, and sometimes students have to pause their education before they complete their degree. Unfortunately, the labor market doesn鈥檛 usually reward those with 鈥渟ome college, but no degree,鈥 who , on average, than associate or bachelor鈥檚 degree holders. This is an especially likely scenario for a number of students who may have been forced to leave college in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, for financial or health reasons for themselves or their families.
But many who transferred before completing their associate degree or other credential may have done so if the credits they earned at both institutions were combined. Luckily, there is a policy that can help those students in this situation, known as 鈥渞everse transfer.鈥 Through reverse transfer, state and system policymakers can create a path for students to receive the deserved recognition for the learning and work they鈥檝e already done. Reverse transfer works by sharing data on the courses completed at a four-year institution with the two-year college a student previously attended. Once the student鈥檚 new credits fulfill the requirements for an associate degree, the former institution awards the student with the degree. Already, have a statewide reverse transfer policy requiring or incentivizing their public institutions to share this data. This benefits those students who are still enrolled, as that reverse transfer policies improve retention and graduation rates. If students have to stop out for any reason, they are more competitive in the labor force with an associate degree than just an accumulation of credits. And providing transfer students with this milestone will recognize the work they have completed.
Recommendation: States and higher education systems should implement reverse transfer policies so that their institutions share the data necessary for community colleges in their state to award degrees when their former students have earned them with credit from the four-year college they have transferred to. Their policies should be to award degrees automatically and remove barriers that are not academic to make this process smoother for students. They should also consider partnering with the , which can help facilitate reverse transfer, including across state lines. The health and economic crisis caused by the pandemic has made students more vulnerable, and enacting reverse transfer will help those whose education plans have been derailed, even if just temporarily.
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