Credit When It’s Due (CWID) - Reverse Transfer

Last Updated: 03/12/2024

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Overview

The Credit When It’s Due (CWID) initiative was a multi-foundation funded (6 foundations), multi-state (16 states) initiative aimed at increasing associate degree conferral for transfer students who meet associate degree requirements while on route to baccalaureate degree at a four-year institution (this process is known as reverse transfer).

In addition to increasing associate degree attainment, CWID aimed to impact transfer and articulation policies more broadly, improving inefficiencies in processes and policies, removing barriers to degree completion, and strengthening technology infrastructure to support transfer and articulation.

The Community College Research Initiatives (CCRI) at the University of Washington was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to conduct research on the CWID initiative.

A comprehensive technical report that examined the implementation and outcomes of CWID is available from the Institute for Higher Education Policy  (IHEP): The Implementation and Outcomes of Credit When It’s Due (CWID) in 15 States - IHEP (2017, June)

Early (baseline) reports on CWID were conducted at the Office of Community College Research and Leadership | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (OCCRL) and published in Credit When It’s Due: Results from the Baseline Study by Jason L. Taylor, Cari Bishop, Julia Panke Makela, Debra D. Bragg, and Collin M. Ruud (2013, October).

Outcomes

Credit When It’s Due enabled 7,000 students from 11 states (some states were continuing to collect data when the outcomes study was published) to secure associate degrees–helping to reduce the sizable ranks of Americans with some college but no degree.

Background

Across the U.S., many students transfer from community colleges to four-year universities without having completed their associate degrees. Credit When It’s Due allows those transfer students to lock in their associate’s credentials once they’ve completed the necessary credits –a process known as reverse transfer. Reverse transfer is important because it ensures that community-college transfer students who end up not finishing their bachelor’s degrees emerge from college with some form of postsecondary credential, rather than debt but no degree. Of all students nationally who started at community colleges in 2008, just 16% completed a degree at a four-year institution within six years. Addressing this challenge is a key part of increasing the percentage of Americans with an education beyond high school.

Related

Funders

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Greater Texas Foundation, Helios Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, Lumina Foundation, USA Funds (became Strada).

Resources

Credit When It’s Due enables 7,000 associate’s degrees (luminafoundation.org)

https://www.ihep.org/

https://www.ihep.org/publication/the-implementation-and-outcomes-of-credit-when-its-due-cwid-in-15-states/

https://www.washington.edu/ccri/

pdf (illinois.edu)

The Colorado Re-Engaged Initiative: Recognizing Learning for Non-Credential Students

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