Noncredit Research Collaborative

Last Updated: 03/09/2024

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Overview

Researchers from four universities (University of Michigan, University of California-Irvine, University of North Carolina - Charlotte, and Rutgers University) are partnering in the Noncredit Research Collaborative launched in early 2024, with the support of a grant from Lumina Foundation.

The Education & Employment Research Center at Rutgers University is managing the Collaborative which brings together leading researchers committed to providing critical information needed for data-informed decision-making on noncredit education in postsecondary institutions.

The Collaborative is partnering with states and colleges across the country to build the noncredit data infrastructure and conduct methodologically rigorous research on noncredit programs and student outcomes to inform policy and practice.

Background

Policymakers, practitioners, and researchers are seeking short-term flexible options to prepare adults for the workforce. Many states have the capacity to meet this need at scale through noncredit postsecondary education programs, however, stakeholders typically work with sparse and inconsistent data about noncredit education. Insights from evidence-based research are needed to develop a better understanding of noncredit education and its impact on learners and the economy.

Examples of Questions Answered in FAQ section

  • What is noncredit education?
  • What are the types of noncredit education?
  • How many community college students enroll in noncredit each year?
  • Who enrolls in noncredit?
  • What are the outcomes of those enrolled in noncredit?
  • What data are states collecting on noncredit?
  • What do we know about quality in the design of noncredit program offerings?
  • What data does the federal government collect on noncredit enrollments?

Examples of Research by Research Team

  • State Noncredit Data Project
    • Principal Investigator: Michelle Van Noy, Education and Employment Research Center, Rutgers University
    • Funder: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation & The National Science Foundation, NCSES
    • Project years: 2021 – Present
    • Abstract: Noncredit education and non-degree credentials have grown significantly in community colleges over the past several decades, but very little data exist on their effectiveness. This project will analyze program-level noncredit data to better understand the characteristics of such programs and to develop a taxonomy to guide future data collection efforts.
  • Improving educational and economic opportunities through community college career and technical pipelines
    • Principal Investigator: Peter Riley Bahr, University of Michigan
    • Funder: Lumina Foundation for Education
    • Project years: 2023 – 2025
    • Abstract: Many states are investing heavily in initiatives to grow college enrollment and graduation among adult-age individuals and strengthen economic resilience and vitality by increasing the share of the population who hold credentials of labor market value. Many of these initiatives draw on short-term credentials, stackable credential sequences, and/or noncredit occupational programs. However, we have little understanding of how students are utilizing these educational opportunities, and how use is related to workforce opportunities, which hinders the ability of states to use resources efficiently, maximize the achievement of goals, and ensure that socioeconomically disadvantaged and marginalized students benefit educationally and economically from emerging educational policies. To address this sizable blind spot in policy-relevant research, Dr. Peter Bahr is leading the project team to conduct six studies focused on (1) transitions between noncredit and for-credit occupational coursework and (2) for-credit stackable credential pathways in career technical education fields. The research draws primarily on state administrative data, supplemented by data collected through student interviews or student focus groups to unpack findings from the analyses of administrative data.
  • Exploring Noncredit CTE Program Factors that Strengthen Workforce Pipelines
    • Principal Investigator: Di Xu, University of California, Irvine
    • Funder: Institute of Education Sciences (IES)
    • Project years: 2022 – 2025
    • Abstract: Building on a long-standing partnership with the Virginia Community College System (VCCS) and its 23 institutions, this project aims to  explore malleable factors within postsecondary noncredit career technical education (CTE) programs that may influence students’ academic and workforce outcomes.
  • Investigating Success Patterns and Labor Market Outcomes Among Students in Non-credit Programs
    • Principal Investigator: Di Xu, University of California, Irvine
    • Funder: Lumina Foundation
    • Project years: 2022 – 2024
    • Abstract: This project explores and documents noncredit course enrollment, completion, and subsequent educational and labor market outcomes among students enrolled in non-credit CTE programs in the Virginia Community College System.
  • Investigating the Labor Market Returns to Community College Noncredit Programs
    • Principal Investigator: Peter Riley Bahr, University of Michigan
    • Funder: Lumina Foundation
    • Project years: 2022 – 2023
    • Abstract: Millions of students enroll in community colleges noncredit programs every year—most in occupational training—but there are few large-scale studies of the effectiveness of noncredit occupational programs in increasing students’ employment opportunities and earnings. In this study, use longitudinal administrative data from Texas to investigate the labor market returns to community college noncredit occupational education, as well as how the returns vary by duration of training, field of study, number of training spells, student demographic characteristics, and other factors.
  • Review of the Evidence on Noncredit Education
    • Principal Investigator: Michelle Van Noy, Education and Employment Research Center, Rutgers University
    • Funder: ECMC Foundation
    • Project years: 2022 – 2023
    • Abstract: The Education and Employment Research Center conducted a review of the existing research literature on outcomes from noncredit education.
  • Quality in Community College Non-Credit Education
    • Principal Investigator: Michelle Van Noy, Education and Employment Research Center, Rutgers University
    • Funder: Lumina Foundation
    • Project years: 2020 – 2023
    • Abstract: An estimated 5 million students enroll in noncredit courses and programs at community and technical colleges each year. This project examined how community colleges ensure quality in noncredit programs and how students make choices about pursuing these credentials.
  • Multistate Study of Noncredit Education in Community Colleges
    • Principal Investigator: Peter Riley Bahr, University of Michigan
    • Funder:  Lumina Foundation
    • Project years: 2020 – 2022
    • Abstract: Community college noncredit education is a substantial yet sorely understudied segment of American higher education, enrolling millions of students each year, many in occupational courses. There is growing interest in understanding the extent to which noncredit programs support students’ future educational attainment and workforce preparation, but data limitations at the state and national levels have prevented intensive research. In this study, we undertake the most exhaustive empirical portrait of community college noncredit education to date. Using administrative data on millions of community college students from Iowa, California, Texas, Louisiana, and Indiana, we investigate who enrolls in noncredit education, the types of courses they take, and the academic and employment outcomes that they experience, seeking to assess the extent to which noncredit educational programs are a launchpad to employment opportunities, an onramp to credit-bearing coursework and credential programs, or a deadend for students
  • Opening the black box: Measuring statewide noncredit outcomes in Iowa
    • Principal Investigator: Mark D’Amico, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte
    • Funder:  Council for the Study of Community Colleges
    • Project years: 2018 – 2019
    • Abstract: Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and Baylor University partnered with the Iowa Department of Education to study noncredit completion and contact hour outcomes.

Education and Employment Research Center (EERC)

A nonprofit research organization based in Rutgers University’s School of Management and Labor Relations. EERC’s research and evaluation examines the intersection between education and work with the goal of being an evidence-based resource for policy and practice. Work focuses on issues of Equity and Quality in education and training for students and workers, the institutions that serve them, and the broader economy, in the context of the changing labor market associated with Future of Work.

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