How Dual Enrollment is Driving College Enrollment
Jeff Selingo
Bestselling author | Strategic advisor on future of learning and work | College admissions and early career expert | Contributor, The Atlantic | Angel investor | Editor, Next newsletter | Co-host, FutureU podcast
??? What's up with dual enrollment, learnings from this year's ASU+GSV Summit, and whether adding football improves college enrollment. Here are excerpts from Next. Sign up here .
EVENTS
?? Opportunities to grow enrollment will be?the topic of the "Next Office Hour" on Thursday, May 2 at 2 pm ET/11 am PT. I'll be in conversation with:
?? Register for free. (Support from Cengage)
??? On May 1, I'll be joining my friends at Grown & Flown at 8 p.m. ET as part of their admissions group to provide an update on this crazy year for enrolling in college and what it might portend for next cycle. If you join that group now, you can get a 21-day free membership that includes a great line-up of weekly live sessions, including mine on May 1. Sign up here .
THE LEAD
The biggest growth area in enrollment for community colleges isn’t working adults or new high-school graduates looking for a cheaper alternative to four-year colleges. It’s high school students.
Even as enrollment in community colleges plunged during the pandemic, one bright spot was dual enrollment. That’s where high school students take courses for college credit in partnership with a local institution, typically a community college. Between 2022 and 2023, the number of dual-enrollment students spiked by nearly 13% at community colleges, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Dual enrollment students now account for nearly one in five community college students nationally .
Colleges love dual enrollment because it’s a source of students at a time when enrollment of traditional-age students is down. Parents and students love dual enrollment because it offers a head start on college.?
But as Michael Horn and I explored on a recent episode of the Future U Podcast with John Fink , a senior research associate at the Community College Research Center , there is no single definition–or standard–of dual enrollment. Indeed, as Fink told us, there are some 36 different terms for dual enrollment and lots of different arrangements: it’s basically anything that gives early college credit in high school that’s not AP or IB.
“It is like the wild west,” Fink said.?
We’ve been teasing this episode all season because I get so many questions on dual enrollment from parents, high school counselors, and college admissions officers. So, give it a listen when you can .?
Here were my three takeaways from the wide-ranging conversation:
1?? Credit transfer. The research on dual enrollment is still nascent, but Fink told us there is evidence that taking dual enrollment courses accelerates the degree–somewhat.?
2?? Quality. There’s a 90% pass rate on dual enrollment courses, which is a lot higher than say AP or IB.?
3?? Follow the money. Dual enrollment has helped some struggling colleges fill seats, but at what cost??
Bottom line: So far, the benefits of dual enrollment–encouraging students to get a head start on college–seem to outweigh the costs, but with college enrollment falling and campuses looking to fill revenue gaps, the incentives to take short cuts only increase.?
What I Learned at the ASU + GSV Summit
I'm still resting after three exhausting but exhilarating days in San Diego at the annual ASU + GSV Summit, which brings together more than 6,000 ed-tech executives, financiers in the space, and educators in K-12 and higher ed to talk about innovation and the future of education. As Quentin Story McAndrew, PhD of Coursera put it during a panel I was on: it’s a lot of “extraverting.” Yes, it is.?
But the summit, as always, was a good way to connect with people face-to-face and understand what’s happening in the larger education ecosystem.
What did I learn? Here are the excerpts from the notebook I posted elsewhere on LinkedIn. Feel free to join in the conversation there in the comments.
??♂? Higher ed needs to stop trying to make big bets on the side of their desk and with pennies from the cushions. If something is a priority, make it one by stopping the dozen other things that aren’t.?
?? The talent bench, governance, and financial models of higher ed aren't designed for the moment.
?? We’re too caught up in the language of legacy degrees and credits. Let’s focus on outcomes. That could be 90 credits, 120, a micro-credential, a degree. Worry less about the names and more about the on- and off-ramps.
?? But the degree still matters, eventually. As one military veteran in one session said: when he got the degree, he felt like a different person and family thought he was different, too.
?? AI, AI, AI. No, we’re not hyping it. But even people we think should know where this is going, in honest moments over three days last week, said they didn’t. How can we help students complement technology? AI will also create new jobs. How can higher ed be part of that job creation?
?? Don’t let private-equity firms and the big tech companies control AI. Just like higher ed had a seat at the table during the development of the internet, higher ed needs to control its own destiny.
?? We need more talent in higher ed. Even when the data tell us what to do, we don’t have people to implement change.
?? Trust. Fewer people trust higher ed, yet we still think we’re insulated from what has happened in every other industry. Reminds me of 1995, when newspapers didn’t think the internet would impact us because we were a public trust and everyone would want to get a dead tree on their doorstep?
?? Affordability matters more than ever.
?? Higher ed needs to be more accessible. I landed at a great dinner with former NFL players, who are part of the Pro Athlete Community , trying to bring mentorship, education, and professional development to retired athletes.
For more coverage from ASU + GSV:
?? Listen to Inside Higher Ed’s The Key podcast , which has excerpts of editor Doug Lederman’s excellent panel about stackable and alternative credentials with American Council on Education’s Ted Mitchell , Boise State University 's Marlene Tromp , Hunter College’s Ann Kirschner , and ASU’s Maria Anguiano .
??? Watch my main stage panel about the massive experiment in Texas with embedding credentials into legacy degrees with J.B. Milliken, chancellor of the The University of Texas System , and Jeff Maggioncalda , the CEO of Coursera.
??? More on the FAFSA Mess. The Atlantic’s Adam Harris has a good piece on the origins of the botched rollout of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. As he writes, “the Biden administration could have focused on making sure that FAFSA worked, though it would likely have had to punt on other priorities, such as student-debt relief. And that may have made a good deal of sense: After all, changing higher-education regulations and canceling debt won’t help students if they can’t figure out a way to pay for school in the first place. (The Atlantic /paywall)
??? Does Football=Enrollment? My former Chronicle of Higher Education colleague Welch Suggs , who is now an associate professor of journalism at the University of Georgia, wrote to me last week with the results of a new study he authored with other academics on a question that comes up often: does adding football to the line-up of athletics at a college help enrollment??
?? New Overtime Rules.?“Colleges and universities across the country will be forced to provide either a pay raise or overtime benefits to thousands of admissions officers, student affairs professionals and athletics staffers under a new rule finalized by the U.S. Department of Labor on Tuesday. Previously, universities were exempt from clocking work hours and providing overtime pay to any employee salaried at or above $35,568. The new rule raises that bar nearly 65 percent to $58,656.” (Inside Higher Ed )
OUT AND ABOUT
?? On Monday, April 29 at 7pm at the Community Center’s Alden Theatre in? McLean, Virginia for the Safe Comunity Coalition to discuss stress-free college admissions. Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. Space is limited. Register here.
?? In Los Angeles, May 6-7, for the annual Milken Global Conference to moderate a panel on the future of the degree and take part in other education programming. If you'll be there, let me know.
Until next time, Cheers — Jeff???
If you got this from a friend, see past issues and subscribe to get your own copy.
Student Advisor - Military Spouse
3 个月I am so thankful for my experience with dual enrollment in high school, and now my oldest child starts her first dual enrollment course tomorrow! Saving her time and us lots of money!
Thanks for this read: I’ll jump in to say that 1) I think we think less of the next generation. To say the content has to be reduced to them or they’re too immature is interesting. 2) Many, if not most, dually enrolled kids are homeschoolers. If you’ve paid attention to their statistics, maturity and readiness is rarely an issue. I took a bus to do dual enrollment at my local community college at 16. They didn’t even know I wasn’t a student. I got my work done and I was mature…. Probably more so than the 19+ age group. As a homeschooling mom of 5, I want my kids to enjoy this time… so we are doing more community service, and extracurriculars…. Not rushing to college.
Sociology/Family Violence at Mid Michigan Community College
6 个月I designed courses and taught dual enrolled students in the classroom and the expanding 'online' market for 12 years at a CC. Two big objections: A classroom full of high school aged (15 to 17) kids with a10th grade education is clearly dumbed down for them. How else could it possibly be that unless the 11th and 12th grades are not important. and we can 'skip that'. Any understanding of brain development tells us these are critical years and that many high school graduates are not fully matured enough to go to be a college or university either. The second is that the classes sold to these kids by high school counselors were promoted as "Get the boring requirements done and out of the way before you go to college." And it is free! for you. And they dumped on the subject matter as those awful required courses nobody really needs anyway. It is no wonder they never learn very much. The rare gifted student received far more one on one and actually learned what was intended if they lucked into a skilled and engaged teacher. No guarantees there either. The gifted students actually made the rest look like what they were; kids looking to get out of something the easy way. Too bad!
Seasoned Higher Education Leader; Commentator; Freelance Writer
6 个月Students should be able to complete a large number of college credits via dual enrollment prior to high school graduation. But guidance counselors need to give realistic advice about what sort of college readiness those courses provide. In general, they provide the basic level of rigor found on the campus of the college offering the credit. But that doesn't mean the credit will prepare a student well for a more selective institution than the one awarding the credit.