Education Quality Outcomes Standards (EQOS) (EQOS Framework)

Last Updated: 03/11/2024

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Overview

Educational Quality Outcomes Standards (EQOS) launched as an independent nonprofit organization in April 2020. EQOS created a common set of metrics around the efficacy and quality of education and training programs, in response to the need for transparency in the wide range of education and skills training options. Its aim is to help people navigate the increasingly crowded and confusing education and training marketplace.

The EQOS Quality Assurance Framework addresses the need for new ways to evaluate the rapidly expanding range of career-oriented credentials that exist. The Framework focuses on universal, independent measures of education and training program quality based on real-world student outcomes including employment and earnings. There are five key metrics in the Framework: (1) Learning, (2) Completion, (3) Placement, (4) Earnings, and (5) Satisfaction.

EQOS was an outgrowth of the U.S. Department of Education’s Educational Quality Through Innovative Partnerships (EQUIP) program in 2015, which outlined frameworks to evaluate and disburse federal aid for innovative postsecondary institutions and non-traditional education providers. EQUIP was a pilot program to accelerate and evaluate innovation through partnerships between colleges and universities and nontraditional providers of education to equip more Americans with the skills, knowledge, and training needed for the jobs of today and tomorrow. Through the EQUIP program, the  Department sought to learn about these new models including their costs, educational and employment outcomes for students, and methods to measure quality. Information gained from testing and learning from this program would be used to help inform future policy reforms.

Jobs for the Future acquired EQOS in 2022 as a wholly-owned 501(c)(3) nonprofit subsidiary of JFF. Now housed within JFF, EQOS maintains the Framework of Quality Assurance and works with learners and workers, education institutions and postsecondary training providers, private investors, governments, and others to identify high-quality opportunities that lead to equitable economic advancement. Examples of clients and partners include state departments of higher education and/or workforce development in Colorado, Indiana, and New Jersey, as well as private nonprofit and for-profit organizations, including SkillUp, CAEL, Climb Credit, and Credential Engine. Funders to date have included Walmart Foundation, Strada Education Foundation, and Walton Family Foundation.

In 2023, EQOS  partnered with Burning Glass Institute, with support from GitLab Foundation, to expand the EQOS Framework to measure education and training programs based on employment and earnings outcomes. A $2.9 million grant for Jobs for the Future and the Burning Glass Institute to expand Educational Quality Outcomes Standards as a tool to help workers, learners, employers, and policymakers make sense of rapidly growing landscape of postsecondary credentials was announced in late April 2023.  Jobs for the Future and the Burning Glass Institute will work together to incorporate new measures of racial, gender, and income equity—and create consumer and employer friendly applications that make it easier for job seekers and employers in the U.S. to assess a wide variety of education and training programs.

Although there is growing recognition that access to education and training helps workers build new skills and advance in their professional lives, driving income growth and economic mobility, there is recognition too that not all programs and credentials are created equally — and resources are often wasted by learners and employers if they don’t have access to reliable, data-backed insights tied to clear outcomes. This new initiative is focused on increasing transparency across credential programs in the US and helping learners and employers make more informed decisions.

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