Success, Redefined: How Nondegree Pathways Empower Youth to Chart Their Own Course to Confidence, Employability, and Financial Freedom - Research Study

Last Updated: 02/29/2024

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Overview

As reported in Success, Redefined (October 2023), Jobs for the Future (JFF) and American Student Assistance partnered to study how nondegree pathways empower youth to chart their own course to confidence, employability, and financial freedom. The study population was youth ages 13-24 (Gen Z). Study areas included:

  • the reasons for not pursuing or finishing college
  • priorities in their education and career journeys
  • barriers to continuing their education
  • satisfaction with their post-school choices
  • the drivers of that level of satisfaction
  • how confident they were
  • whether they felt prepared for the workforce
  • their sources of information about pathways
  • how much they thought high school prepared them to make a choice.

Morning Consult conducted the survey of over 1,100 non-college youth who were not pursuing a four-year degree to learn about their post-high school education preferences. The survey explored the preferences, feelings, and perceptions of three groups:

  1. Non-college youth: Those neither enrolled nor graduated from a college (encompasses all our survey respondents)
  2. Pathway youth: Those who pursued or are pursuing any nondegree postsecondary pathway (describes 558 of our survey respondents)
  3. Non-pathway youth: Those who didn’t pursue or aren’t pursuing any nondegree postsecondary pathway (describes 561 of our survey respondents)

Key Findings

  • About half of survey respondents chose to pursue nondegree, education-to-career pathways such as apprenticeship, certification, and licensure.
  • The other half of respondents chose not to pursue any postsecondary education.
  • Respondents who pursued nondegree pathways felt confident in themselves, their plans, and their future. They largely felt workforce ready. They reported higher levels of employment than non-pathway respondents. Nearly all those surveyed were satisfied with their chosen pathway.
  • When it comes to considering postsecondary options, youth prioritize the ability to start earning quickly, not incur excessive costs, have the ability to work in their field of interest, and adhere to a flexible schedule.
  • An information void exists around nondegree pathways. This hinders young people who might otherwise be interested in accessing them. K-12 schools are not conveying information about nondegree pathways to the same extent they are four-year degree pathways.
  • The level of interest in learning more about nondegree pathways is strong: two-thirds of non-pathway respondents said they would have considered a nondegree pathway had they known more about it.

Background

Foundational to this study is the education-to-career pathways vision (see page 8 of report) that all young people need the skills to participate in, adapt to, and thrive in an increasingly complicated and rapidly changing workforce. Accepting and embracing this will benefit more people from a wider diversity of backgrounds and life circumstances. Personalized pathways—not one-size-fits-all models—are the vision, as is a career-oriented education landscape where credentials can be unlocked as desired or needed, and where such credentials may be stacked and carried with a person for the duration of their career and applied to any future education and training.

Resources

Full report: https://expandopportunities.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/ASA_JFF_Success_Redefined.pdf

 

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