Improving the Transfer Handoff
Improving the Transfer Handoff
The Critical Effort to Help Community-College Students Get a Four-Year Degree
For decades, four-year colleges have relied on a steady stream of transfer students to fill their seats and diversify their enrollments. But all too often, those students have become discouraged as credits failed to transfer, financial aid runs out, and feelings of insecurity set in. As enrollment pressures and equity concerns have intensified, institutions are now finding that their own survival is more closely tied to the success of transfer students. Rather than waiting for community-college students to reach out to them, they’re joining with two-year colleges to recruit students early and smooth the path to a bachelor’s degree.
This Chronicle issue brief analyzes which approaches are working and provides practical advice on how to eliminate the barriers standing in students’ way. Its focus is on the most common form of transfer — from two-year to four-year colleges— and includes the latest data to inform leaders how best to ensure the success of this increasingly important and often underappreciated student population.
Purchase the issue brief for insight into:
- Why transfer success matters, and what's at stake for both two- and four-year colleges
- Common barriers and innovative solutions for overcoming transfer challenges
- Five in-depth case studies showing how institutions of all sizes can collaborate to help transfer students
- Detailed commentary on the value of community colleges to both students and academe's broader goals
Date: April 2020
Pages: 40
Digital File Size: 7.13 MB
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