College Credit for Military Experience – North Carolina Military Equivalency System

Last Updated: 04/14/2024

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Overview

In February 2024, the University of North Carolina System (UNC) launched a new tool to translate military occupations and training to college courses across its 16 public universities. The equivalency tool enables some 21,000 military-affiliated service members enrolling in the UNC to help them transfer their technical on-the-job experience into college-level academic credit. Prior to this tool, prospective military learners contacted individual universities to determine which of their military experiences equate to which credits at an institution. The tool enables individual to more quickly compare equivalencies among campuses., to inform their selection of a university path.

The UNC System Military Equivalency System builds on a guide from the American Council on Education (ACE).  The tool draws on the ACE framework and combines it with each university’s course catalog. The result is an automated database that operates like a search engine. The system currently includes close to 7,000 course matches -- matches are expected to grow to 10,000 by summer 2024.

The ACE Military Guide has served as a source of information for all military courses and occupations evaluated by ACE from 1954 to present. ​​ACE credit recommendations are based on evaluations conducted by college and university faculty members. These recommendations appear on the Joint Services Transcript (JST).

In April 2021, ACE launched an updated version of the Military Guide. It offers an interactive web application that facilitates the award of academic credit to students based on their military learning experience.

Background

According to the North Carolina Military Affairs Commission, North Carolina is home to some 675,000 veterans, 20,000 National Guard reservists, and 100,000 active-duty service members. Each year, approximately 13,000 to 22,000 leave the armed forces and return to civilian life.   Many have been trained in high-demand industries in the military, such as health care, information technology, and cybersecurity. The new tool enables them to more easily crosswalk into related careers outside the military.

Other States

Many other states other states—particularly in the Midwest—have invested in similar concepts. The Multi-State Collaborative on Military Credit (MCMC) managed by the Midwest Higher Education Compact facilitates an interstate partnership of 13 states (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio,  South Dakota, Wisconsin). The collaborative of states and public postsecondary institutions exchange information and share promising practices in the areas of articulation of credit, certification, financial aid, data, and technology. They work to translate competencies acquired through military training and experiences into meaningful credits toward various pathways leading to a college degree, earning a certificate, industry recognized credential or license.

References

https://ourncmilitary.nc.gov/military-economic-impact-nc-2022/open

https://coursetransfer.northcarolina.edu/military?h=1

https://militaryguide.acenet.edu/?_gl=1*1hrok3b*_ga*MTYyODgzNjIwNS4xNzEyNjg2NDc3*_ga_S8V2B0PXWS*MTcxMjc3MDY0OS4yLjAuMTcxMjc3MDY0OS4wLjAuMA..

https://militaryguide.acenet.edu/?_gl=1*1hrok3b*_ga*MTYyODgzNjIwNS4xNzEyNjg2NDc3*_ga_S8V2B0PXWS*MTcxMjc3MDY0OS4yLjAuMTcxMjc3MDY0OS4wLjAuMA..

https://www.acenet.edu/Programs-Services/Pages/Credit-Transcripts/Faculty.aspx\

https://jst.doded.mil/jst/

https://www.mhec.org/policy-research/multi-state-collaborative-military-credit

https://www.mhec.org/sites/default/files/resources/MCMC_1pgsummary_1.pdf

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