Community College Baccalaureate Association (CCBA)

Last Updated: Spring 2023

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Established in 1999, the Community College Baccalaureate Association (CCBA) promotes access to community college baccalaureate degrees as a convenient, accessible, and affordable way to help close the nation’s racial, ethnic, and economic gaps. The CCBA is a membership association that provides research data, publications, best practices, state legislation, and experienced consultants that guide and advise member institutions on their baccalaureate programs. The CCBA has grown substantially—from 33 member colleges in 2019 to 124 institutions in 2022, an increase of nearly 350 percent. The CCBA believes that the community college baccalaureate degree improves the structure of higher education. It gives access to those who would otherwise go unserved, offers an environment that fosters student growth and honors students’ personal stories, responds to employer needs, ensures that opportunity is grounded in social justice and equity, and safeguards the vibrancy of communities.

Examples

  • The CCBA, in partnership with Bragg & Associates, published an eBook that highlights 20 promising practices implemented by baccalaureate-conferring community colleges across the nation. The eBook focuses on a central question: What practices make CCB programs valuable to students? It features practices that contribute to more equitable education and employment outcomes for students, including those in historically underserved groups.
  • Webinars aimed at improving and promoting access to community college baccalaureate programs are available at the CCBA YouTube channel: Lessons from the field: Scaling up student-centered CCB programs and California’s CCB journey: A panel discussion.
  • The CCBA publishes research on topics such as surveying the pathways to postsecondary credentials, highlighting specific CCB programs (e.g., school-specific or field-specific), sharing the benefits and opportunities of CCB programs, and providing insights on other postsecondary credential-related topics. Some notable research studies include:
  • Pioneering the community college baccalaureate in California: The experience of West Los Angeles College.
  • A comparative perspective on the community college baccalaureate focusing on the scale of the degree.
  • Improving the local nursing workforce through creation of an RN-BSN program.
  • Beginning in early 2021, the CCBA began developing a national inventory of community college baccalaureate degree programs. Altogether, the national inventory shows nearly 570 CCB programs (not counting approved specializations as separate programs) operating in 148 community and technical colleges across 25 states.
  • New America studied outcomes of the State of Washington’s community college baccalaureate programs. The analysis suggests that expanding baccalaureate programs at community colleges could go a long way toward increasing the share of Americans with bachelor’s degrees. Programs, enrollments, and graduations—all are growing in number. Baccalaureate programs in community colleges can help address racial and socioeconomic disparities in bachelor’s degree attainment by reaching more Americans who have historically been underrepresented among bachelor’s degree holders.

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