Two-Year Degrees by Age – 2012
Two-Year Degrees by Age Group From 2007-08 to 2010-11, the number of degrees awarded to students age 25 and older increased by 22%, compared to 17% for those under age 25. Download Report (pdf) The...
View ArticleTransfer Outcomes – 2012
Outcomes of Two-to-Four Transfer Students About 60% of all two-to-four transfer students graduated with a bachelor’s or higher degree within four years of transferring. Download Report (pdf) The post...
View ArticleSubsequent Enrollment – 2013
Bachelor’s Degree Recipients Who Subsequently Enrolled in Two-Year Institutions 6.5% of students who graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 2008-09 enrolled in a two-year institution within the next...
View ArticleBaccalaureate Attainment of Two-Year to Four-Year Transfer Students –...
In our fifth Signature Report, we examine an increasingly important role community colleges play in helping students attain a baccalaureate degree. As our results show, going from a two-year to a...
View ArticleTwo-Year Contributions to Four-Year Completions – 2015
In the 2013-14 academic year, 46 percent of students who completed a four-year degree were enrolled at a two-year institution at some point in the previous 10 years. Download Report (pdf) Results Data...
View ArticleDegree Pathways – 2015
Of all associate degrees earned in 2008-09 that were reported to the National Student Clearinghouse, 488,046 were found to be the first postsecondary credential earned by a student. Forty-one percent...
View ArticlePost-Bachelor’s Two-Year Enrollment – 2016
During the Great Recession, there was a slight increase in the percentage of bachelor’s degree earners who opted to continue their educations at two-year institutions. However, that percentage has now...
View ArticleCommunity Colleges Outcomes Report – 2017
The Role of Community Colleges in Postsecondary Success The Community Colleges Outcomes Report, “The Role of Community Colleges in Postsecondary Success,” provides report findings from the National...
View ArticleTwo-Year Contributions to Four-Year Completions – 2017
In the 2015-16 academic year, 49 percent of all students who completed a bachelor’s degree at a four-year institution had been enrolled at a two-year public institution at some point in the previous...
View ArticleFrom Community College to Graduate and Professional Degrees – 2017
Community colleges provide an important entry point on the pathway to graduate and professional degree completion. Nearly 20 percent of 2016-17 master’s degree earners originally entered higher...
View ArticleTwo-Year Degrees by Age – 2012
Two-Year Degrees by Age Group From 2007-08 to 2010-11, the number of degrees awarded to students age 25 and older increased by 22%, compared to 17% for those under age 25. Download Report (pdf) The...
View ArticleTransfer Outcomes – 2012
Outcomes of Two-to-Four Transfer Students About 60% of all two-to-four transfer students graduated with a bachelor’s or higher degree within four years of transferring. Download Report (pdf) The post...
View ArticleSubsequent Enrollment – 2013
Bachelor’s Degree Recipients Who Subsequently Enrolled in Two-Year Institutions 6.5% of students who graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 2008-09 enrolled in a two-year institution within the next...
View ArticleBaccalaureate Attainment of Two-Year to Four-Year Transfer Students –...
In our fifth Signature Report, we examine an increasingly important role community colleges play in helping students attain a baccalaureate degree. As our results show, going from a two-year to a...
View ArticleTwo-Year Contributions to Four-Year Completions – 2015
In the 2013-14 academic year, 46 percent of students who completed a four-year degree were enrolled at a two-year institution at some point in the previous 10 years. Download Report (pdf) Results Data...
View ArticleDegree Pathways – 2015
Of all associate degrees earned in 2008-09 that were reported to the National Student Clearinghouse, 488,046 were found to be the first postsecondary credential earned by a student. Forty-one percent...
View Article