Noncredit Mobility Academy

Last Updated: 03/09/2024

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Overview

In December 2023, Education Strategy Group, SHEEO (State Higher Education Executive Officers Association), and Opportunity America at the Progressive Policy Institute launched the Noncredit Mobility Academy.  The two-year Academy is working with state leaders to promote greater economic mobility for learners who start their education journeys in noncredit programs. State teams are attending Academy instructional convenings and working closely with coaches providing technical assistance.

The Academy is helping states build systems and policies to support students’ economic mobility in three areas:

  • State-level taxonomy of noncredit programs aligned with key definitions of quality.
  • Plan to build or improve upon noncredit data collection and reporting.
  • Set of funding recommendations to support or incentivize enrollment in quality programs.

Six states were selected to participate in the Academy following a competitive application process. Each state is conducting three common activities:

  • Better track which learners are completing noncredit programs.
  • Determine what, if any, credentials the learners are earning.
  • Ensure through policy actions that these opportunities are opening doors to higher level credentials and well-paying jobs.

Each state’s plan is focusing on different ways to implement these common activities:

  • Louisiana—Expand on current efforts to collect noncredit credential data and knit these data into the state’s new longitudinal data system under the auspices of the Board of Regents.
  • Maryland—Build on a strong unit record data on noncredit programs systems by doubling down on data usage, with a goal to evaluate return on investment of current state scholarships and identify ways to expand them to include noncredit participation.
  • Massachusetts—Update current state-level taxonomies for noncredit programs and begin to collect data on student enrollment and success in those programs.
  • Montana—Leverage current assets around the state to assess the value of noncredit offerings to local communities and industries, develop shared definitions of noncredit training, and produce guidelines and rubrics to ensure quality offerings that allow participants to move into postsecondary credit programs if they choose.
  • Texas—Build on its extensive work to define, measure, and report on credentials of value to determine how noncredit pathways fit into the state’s understanding of value, especially as the state seeks to implement its new community college funding formula.
  • Virginia—Incorporate current noncredit data into the SHEEO agency’s data collection and reporting, while expanding the inventory of programs beyond those funded by the state’s Workforce Credential Grant to help more Virginians navigate their options for workforce training.

Background

Noncredit programs are typically shorter-term training opportunities to enable learners to gain specific workforce skills and qualifications. They usually do not count toward Associate or Bachelor’s degree requirements.

Learners who begin their educational journeys in noncredit programs need clear pathways to high-value career opportunities. Workforce leaders also need confidence that education systems are equipping individuals with the right knowledge and skills to fill their talent needs.

As colleges develop new approaches to meeting employer hiring needs, noncredit options have grown in popularity—there are estimated to be nearly four million learners currently enrolled in these programs. Yet there are significant gaps in understanding noncredit programs and how they connect to labor market value.

Funding Partners

Ascendium Education Group, the ECMC Foundation

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