So how might we fix this leaky pipeline?
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Itâs a question Iâve been asking in recent weeks of labor-market experts, college leaders, high-school counselors, as well as other policymakers. And there are plenty of good ideasâmany already underwayâto improve the pathway at three critical moments: in high school, in the transition to college, and in the first year of college.
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High school. At the high school level, students are leaving early for jobs because of current wage inflation in low-skill jobs. That might change if the labor market tightens, but new wage levels might already be baked into many of these jobs. In some ways the model that has taken off in higher ed, where colleges and employers work together through an intermediary such as Guild Education or InStride to match workers with colleges using the companiesâ tuition benefits, needs to reach down into K-12 so the workers who left high-school early can earn their diploma on the job.
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High-school to college. For those who get to high-school graduation, Iâm interested in this new partnership between Arizona State University, YouTube, and Crash Course that aims to rethink the first-year of college. Beginning in March, it will offer four courses that are seven weeks long, including English Comp, College Math, U.S. History, and Human Communication. These are the type of classes you’d find in the first year of college.
Students can watch course content on the Study Hall channel on YouTube for free. If they want to take the entire course through ASU, itâs $25. To receive credit from ASU that could then transfer to other colleges, students pay $400. (Disclosure: Iâm a special advisor at ASU.)
This is not only a way for students to âtryâ college at a low cost, itâs also a way for high school students to get a head start on college. In addition, there are short videos about preparing for college and guides for different college majors at any collegeânot just ASU.
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The first-year of college. In my conversations there seems to be widespread agreement that the first-year of college needs a major overhaul.
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One idea gaining tractionâ discussed during a âNext Office Hourâ and a âLinkedIn Liveâ I hosted this monthâ is to embed certificates, badges, and certifications in college courses, particularly in that critical first year. This way, if students do leave college, they have something more than just a collection of credits and perhaps debt.
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âOne worry I hear is that if we give them certifications they might leave us,â Mark Milliron, president of National University, said during our LinkedIn Live. âWe discovered that if they get a cert, they are twice as likely to get a degree. Getting a certification gives them academic momentum.â
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In the Alamo Colleges District in Texas, some 100 courses have built-in badges that are proof students have a specific marketable skill, such as oral communication, written communication, collaboration, problem-solving, and critical thinking.Â
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The San Antonio college also offers Googleâs certificates to students pursuing degrees. The tech company is making a bigger push into higher ed by partnering with colleges to offer credentials in high-growth fields. (The Alamo Colleges District spent more than 18 months researching the micro-credential market before embarking on this strategy and published this helpful series of studies of what they found.)
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âThe real key around around incremental credentials is that itâs that first taste, that foot in the door, that hooks students and keeps them coming back because it doesnât feel overwhelming or daunting if you can come in and do something small,â Kristi Wold-McCormick, assistant vice provost and university registrar at the University of Colorado at Boulder said during the Next Office Hour.
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Embedding badges and certifications in the traditional degree also makes the first year of college more relevant to students. In traditional high ed, students might study a concept in the fourth week of a semester, but not use it until two semesters later, by which time they probably have forgotten what they learned. Or students have no idea how a theory is applied in the outside world as they are learning about it, so they quickly lose interest.
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Such embedded certifications are not replacements for a college degree. But at least if a student leaves early they have some marketable skills and perhaps some motivation in whatever job they hold to go back to college.
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Yes, this means students âswirlâ rather than take a straight path and it never works as well in practice as it seems to in theory. The average student at ASU Online, for instance, comes with transcripts from three different institutions, which illustrates just how much students move around before getting any sort of credential with currency in the job market.
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But the education ecosystem is improving with many new providers, often outside traditional higher ed. This âNew Learning Economyâ that I describe in a recent white paper holds some promise of fixing leaks in the educational pipeline as long as we have quality controls in place and disseminate better data about outcomes. One thing is clear: to meet the skill demands of the near future, we canât afford to keep watching as millions of young adults get off the path to further education.
âď¸ âď¸ âď¸ Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Next. If someone forwarded this to you, get your own copy by signing up for free here.
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đ¨ MARK YOUR CALENDAR: Februaryâs âNext Office Hourâ will be on Tuesday, February 21 at 3 p.m. ET/Noon PT.
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On this webcast we’ll explore how to better bridge the gap between education and work by looking at the role of âmicro-internships,” wrap-around services such as childcare and career coaching, and improved transfer pathways.
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Join us for an interactive conversation to learn from practitioners already doing this work:
- Jeffrey Moss, founder and CEO, Parker Dewey, which offers micro-internships by connecting students and companies
- Lauren Trent, CEO, AdvanceEDU, which partners with universities to give working students affordable and flexible learning options
- Anne Kress, president of Northern Virginia Community College
âşRegister for free here. (Support from Charles Koch Foundation)
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â Iâm looking for help on an article Iâm working on about deferrals from colleges that are inundated with applications. If youâre a student, parent, or counselor seeing a lot of deferrals from colleges right now (or if this happened last year to you, I’d like to hear the ultimate outcome), please reach out by replying to this email. Iâll be in touch with those I might want to talk with further.