The Effects of Structured Transfer Pathways in Community Colleges

Author:

Baker Rachel1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Irvine

Abstract

Most of the students who set out to earn degrees in community colleges never do. Interventions that simplify the complex organizational structures of these schools are promising solutions to this problem. This article is the first to provide rigorous evidence of the effects of structured transfer programs, one such intervention. Leveraging the phased rollout of transfer programs in California, I find large effects of the policy on degrees earned in treated departments. In the first 2 years, this growth was not coupled with growth in total degrees granted or in transfers, but in the third year, there is evidence of increased transfer. The analyses also show that the policy could affect equity; departments that offer transfer degrees became more popular and there is suggestive evidence that the highest achieving student groups enrolled in these classes at higher rates.

Publisher

American Educational Research Association (AERA)

Reference50 articles.

1. Effectiveness of Statewide Articulation Agreements on the Probability of Transfer: A Preliminary Policy Analysis

2. Racial and Gender Differences in the Returns to 2-Year and 4-Year Degrees

3. The Deconstructive Approach to Understanding Community College Students’ Pathways and Outcomes

4. Bahr P. R. (2014). The labor market return in earnings to community college credits in California. Ann Arbor: Center for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education, School of Education, University of Michigan. Retrieved from http://www.soe.umich.edu/people/profile/peter_riley_bahr/

5. Bailey T., Jenkins D., Leinbach T. (2005). What we know about community college low-income and minority student outcomes: Descriptive statistics from national surveys. Retrieved from http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/publications/low-income-minority-student-outcomes.html

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