国产视频

Introduction

College can seem out of reach for many students who perceive a bachelor鈥檚 degree as unaffordable and unattainable. It is no surprise, then, that students from the top socioeconomic quintile enroll in college more than 50 percentage points more than students from the bottom quintile and are much less likely to first seek an associate degree.1 For many low-income students, students of color, and adult students, the pathway to a bachelor鈥檚 degree begins at a community college. According to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center (NSCRC), only 23 percent of students who began at a community college and attended exclusively full time were able to transfer and complete a bachelor鈥檚 degree within six years.2 Transfer and graduation rates are much worse for the majority of students who attend part time and they are stubbornly dismal for Black, Native American, Latinx, and low-income students.3 A variety of transfer interventions (articulation agreements, guided pathways, university centers, credential stacking, and others) have done some good but the COVID-19 pandemic only worsened the state of transfer.4 It is clear that transfer is not working for many community college students who want bachelor鈥檚 degrees.

And it makes sense that about 80 percent of community college students aim to earn bachelor鈥檚 degrees.5 The bachelor鈥檚 degree remains the main entry point to the middle class. Americans without these degrees are especially vulnerable to economic downturns.6 Coming out of the Great Recession, almost 75 percent of new jobs went to bachelor鈥檚 degree holders.7 But many students, especially those in rural areas, live in education deserts, where access to bachelor鈥檚 degrees is limited.8 And even where there are colleges and universities in the area, sometimes this is an 鈥渙pportunity mirage,鈥9 where there are higher education opportunities but students can鈥檛 access them due to cost, program capacity constraints, work, or caregiving responsibilities or other challenges facing adult and non-traditional students.10 Students need options to further their education that are accessible to them where they are, with the resources and time that they have.

One solution to these issues that has become more popular in recent years is allowing community colleges to offer bachelor鈥檚 degrees, often in high-demand and applied fields. Bachelor鈥檚 degree programs offered by community colleges don't just expand access, they do so in a way that fills critical equity gaps facing adult and working learners, rural students, and those who began at a community college and want to continue where they started.

But allowing community colleges to deliver bachelor鈥檚 degrees is controversial. Higher education leaders and those in state legislatures fear mission creep, duplication, low quality, and undermining traditional colleges and universities.11 The purpose of this literature review is to provide an overview of the research on the community college bachelor鈥檚 degree (CCB),12 with a particular eye to questions of equity, labor market returns, student outcomes, quality, and whether these programs address key choke points and widen access to the bachelor鈥檚 degree and economic stability.

Citations
  1. Doug Shapiro, Afet Dundar, Faye Huie, Phoebe Khasiala Wakhungu, Xin Yuan, Angel Nathan, and Youngsik Hwang, Tracking Transfer: Measures of Effectiveness in Helping Community College Students to Complete Bachelor鈥檚 Degrees (Herndon, VA: National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, 2022), .
  2. Shapiro et al., Tracking Transfer.
  3. Shapiro et al., Tracking Transfer; and Gloria Crisp and Anne-Marie Nu帽ez, 鈥淯nderstanding the Racial Transfer Gap: Modeling Underrepresented Minority and Nonminority Students鈥 Pathways from Two-to Four-Year Institutions,鈥 Review of Higher Education 37, no. 3 (2014): 291鈥320, .
  4. J. Causey, A. Gardner, H. Kim, S. Lee, A. Pevitz, M. Ryu, A. Scheetz, and D. Shapiro, COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress: First Two Years of the Pandemic Report (Herndon, VA: National Student Clearinghouse, 2022), .
  5. Community College Research Center (website), 鈥淐ommunity College FAQs,鈥 .
  6. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (website), 鈥淓ducation Pays, 2021: Career Outlook,鈥 2022, ; Anthony P. Carnevale, Jeff Strohl, Neil Ridley, and Artem Gulish, Three Educational Pathways to Good Jobs: High School, Middle Skills, and Bachelor's Degree (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, 2018), ; and Tiffany Julian, Work-Life Earnings by Field of Degree and Occupation for People With a Bachelor鈥檚 Degree: 2011 (Washington, DC: United States Census Bureau, 2012), .
  7. Anthony P. Carnevale, Tamara Jayasundera, and Artem Gulish, America鈥檚 Divided Recovery: College Haves and Have-Nots (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, 2016), .
  8. Nicholas W. Hillman, 鈥淕eography of College Opportunity,鈥 American Educational Research Journal 53, no. 4 (2016): 987鈥1021, .
  9. Elizabeth Meza, 鈥淥vercoming the 鈥極pportunity Mirage鈥 with Community College Baccalaureate Degrees,鈥 EdCentral (blog), 国产视频, May 25, 2021, source.
  10. Debra D. Bragg, 鈥淧athways to College for Underserved and Nontraditional Students: Lessons from Research, Policy, and Practice,鈥 in The State of College Access and Completion, ed. Laura W. Perna and Anthony Jones (New York: Routledge, 2013), 46鈥68; Mary Alice McCarthy and Debra D. Bragg, 鈥淓scaping the Transfer Trap: Want More Students to Get Bachelor's Degrees? Let Community Colleges Award Them,鈥 Washington Monthly, August 2019, ; and Meza, 鈥淥pportunity Mirage.鈥
  11. Scott Jaschik and Doug Lederman, The 2019 Inside Higher Ed Study of Community College Presidents (Washington, DC: Inside Higher Ed and Gallup, 2019), .
  12. We use bachelor鈥檚 and baccalaureate interchangeably. While the literature tends to use 鈥渂accalaureate鈥 more frequently, we believe bachelor鈥檚 is the clearest term for a more general audience.

Table of Contents

Close