This site uses cookies to improve your experience. To help us insure we adhere to various privacy regulations, please select your country/region of residence. If you do not select a country, we will assume you are from the United States. Select your Cookie Settings or view our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Used for the proper function of the website
Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Strictly Necessary: Used for the proper function of the website
Performance/Analytics: Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
PHILADELPHIA-- In a significant recognition of their transformative efforts in higher education, Chattanooga State CommunityCollege and Southwestern Oregon CommunityCollege have been awarded the prestigious Leah Meyer Austin Award by Achieving the Dream (ATD). The college saw an 8.7 percentage points.
“When I first met with my advisor, I was excited to dive into my program,” says Maria, a first-generation communitycollege student. But when I realized there was no pre-college math course to take, I panicked. As Black communitycollege presidents leading this work in California, these challenges are personal to us.
While communitycolleges play a crucial role in providing accessible and affordable education to diverse student populations, many still struggle to fully accommodate students with disabilities, according to insights from communitycollege students, faculty, and higher education experts.
The California CommunityColleges system is rolling out an ambitious new project aimed at making higher education more Dr. Rowena M. Tomaneng, Deputy Chancellor of the California CommunityColleges. As the largest system of higher education in the nation, California CommunityColleges serves 2.1
Larry Galizio, President & CEO of the CommunityCollege League of California. California's communitycolleges find themselves caught in a 60-year-old funding constraint that increasingly hampers their ability to serve todays students, according to a new report from the CommunityCollege League of California.
Johnson The allure of a communitycollege presidency lies in the opportunity it affords to effect meaningful change in the lives of our students. And those who approach the work any differently rarely enjoy prolonged or notable success. But we should never neglect the community.
In a testament to how communitycolleges can transform lives and regional economies, Southwest Wisconsin Technical College has been named the winner of the 2025 Aspen Prize for CommunityCollege Excellence, the nation's most prestigious recognition for communitycolleges. Each will receive $100,000.
Over half of Asian students and nearly 40% of white students earn a college degree within eight years of high school graduation, while less than 20% of low-income, Black, or Latinx students reach the same milestone. These gaps persist across California's entire higher education system, from communitycolleges to the University of California.
The report, "Pathways to Opportunity: Examining Students' Academic and Economic Outcomes at HBCUs, TCUs, and MSIs," found that these institutions consistently outperform non-minority serving institutions in awarding degrees to their target populations and providing pathways to economic success for underrepresented students.
The recent Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies report on the steep enrollment declines of Black male students at communitycolleges is a stark reminder that our sector must accelerate the crucial work to ensure the academic success of Black male students.
With the demise of affirmative action, threats to diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives (DEI), and policies in higher education there might not be an immediate increase in the number of Black men seeking to enroll in higher education. This stifles Black student success and contributes to low graduation rates from high schools.
As chief executive officers in the California communitycollege system, we embarked upon the topic of STEM out of an acute awareness of the lack of Dr. Lennor Johnson opportunities available to disproportionately impacted communities, and a shared commitment to forging increased pathways for those with the least access.
Oregon is changing how $550 million-plus in annual local and state taxpayer funding will be distributed to the state’s 17 communitycolleges. As it stands, the communitycolleges funding model distributed funds almost entirely based on student enrollment, which did not incorporate student success components.
Supreme Court struck down race-consciousness in college admissions upending four decades of precedent and reshaping the landscape of higher education (Edelman, 2023, par. The presentation drew upon a study by Smalls (2023) focused on the experiences of African American communitycollege trustees. Recommendations follow.
When it comes to equity in higher education, Dr. Tammeil Gilkerson has been a leader. Her work around students’ basic needs, supporting undocumented and mixed-status students, and achieving social justice through focused racial equity efforts has made her a rising star in communitycollege leadership.
PHILADELPHIA— Despite the ongoing attacks to diversity, equity and inclusion within higher education, more than a thousand educators gathered in-person and virtually late last week to share strategies and brainstorm ways to center equitable outcomes for the students who attend their institutions. Dr. Michael A.
The path to higher education success has many obstacles and barriers for Latinos across the U.S. Brown, is to advance Latino student success in higher education by promoting Latino student achievement, conducting analysis to inform educational policies and advancing institutional practices. Santiago and Sarita E.
Highlighting excellence in communitycollege education, Achieving the Dream (ATD) has named 23 institutions as either Leader Colleges or Leader Colleges of Distinction for 2025, celebrating their commitment to student success and institutional reform.
The City Colleges of Chicago (CCC) have made a pledge for educational equity, and institutional and organizational partnerships will help make that pledge a reality. The seven communitycolleges in the CCC system currently have a 30% completion rate for Black students and 33% completion rate for Latinx students.
Over the last two decades, our nation’s communitycolleges have received increasing recognition, and for good reason. Communitycollege students are more likely to be Black, Hispanic, and from lower-income backgrounds than four-year students. Why should new reform efforts focus on leadership?
This increase, while notable, also highlights the persistent challenges that remain in achieving true gender equity at the highest levels of academia. Success stories Among the initiatives success stories is Dr. Shanna L. Jackson, who was appointed president at Nashville State CommunityCollege in 2018.
By providing dedicated funding, we empower institutions to create environments where Black students feel supported, valued, and prepared for successful careers beyond college. Its an equity issue, she added. A very predictable, persistent, and pervasive gap in achievement [for Black students] exists, said Bush. Garcia asked.
Additionally, Curry has secured millions of dollars for student success initiatives. It’s a testament that the college is thriving, thanks in large part to Curry, who has been the school’s most vocal cheerleader. Dr. Keith Curry Eddie Ruvalcaba Photography It’s no secret that Compton College has had its fair share of challenges.
Success for all students in higher education cannot simply be achieved with a “one-size-fits-all approach,” according to a new equity toolkit from Achieving the Dream (ATD). Equity is everyone's job at an institution,” said Francesca Carpenter, director of equity initiatives at ATD and contributor to the toolkit.
Dr. Michael Gavin Delta College is a two-year public communitycollege in University Center, Michigan. Before serving at Delta, Gavin worked at Prince George’s CommunityCollege for 13 years and Anne Arundel College for seven years, both located in Maryland. I mean, the mission is very clear,” says Gavin.
Sáenz is the associate dean for Student Success, Community Engagement & Administration at the University of Texas at Austin. Sáenz says Burmicky came to UT Austin already an experienced higher education practitioner who wanted to do research on problems of practice with an equity lens.
Colclough hatched an idea — what if they could develop professional learning environments easily accessible for all faculty in North Carolina’s communitycolleges, and what if that development could move the needle on student success? Stout’s speech hit Jaeger and Colclough in their hearts.
Kelli Sims Butler The California CommunityCollege System consists of 116 institutions with over 1.8 In the system, there are 140 CommunityCollege Chief Executive Officers (CEO). Of the current 140 chancellors and college presidents, 63 are female, and 12 identify as Black females. million students.
Day three of the 2023 Dream Conference in Chicago kicked off with a heightened focus on building partnerships that strengthen students and fortify the community workforce. The Dream conference is hosted annually by Achieving the Dream (ATD), a reform network of over 300 communitycolleges working to equitize higher education.
More communitycolleges in the U.S. are beginning to offer bachelor's degrees in addition to their usual offerings, and many of them serve minority populations, according to a recent report from The CommunityCollege Baccalaureate Association (CCBA) and higher ed consulting firm Bragg & Associates Inc.
It’s not an everyday occurrence when a communitycollege leader gets a phone call telling them their institution will receive an influx of funding in the millions. when MacKenzie Scott, one of the richest women in the world, decided to make a major investment in communitycolleges.
At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, communitycolleges across the country saw a decline in enrollment for myriad reasons — financial, family, illness, lack of internet or inability to adapt to online learning. The purpose of communitycolleges is to increase access to higher education for the most vulnerable populations.”
Even on campuses with additional services, a pantry’s success is typically measured in terms of the numbers of students using it or the amount of food distributed. Martin argues for change in food pantries writ large, moving beyond a focus on food distribution with new models that center empathy, equity, and systems reform.
Salcedo is the director of the Center for CommunityCollege Partnerships at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The tutoring and academic counseling were crucial to her success. The daughter of Bangladeshi immigrants, she is the first in her family to graduate college. Then, you see the successes.”
There are 116 communitycolleges in California. The college recognized that the campus needed a safe space for males to get together, interact and learn from each other as well as to access resources,” says Jamal Biggs, director of the QCC MRC. One thing Compton College and President [Dr.
It is expected to assist campuses in designing and implementing equity-centered curricular models that connect student learning to career exploration, development of professional purpose, and acquisition of transferrable skills. Ashley Finley, vice president for research and senior advisor to the president, will serve as project director.
Communitycolleges were able to persevere through the pandemic thanks to the emergency relief funding passed through Congress. That’s the conclusion of the latest research from the Accelerating Recovery in CommunityColleges Network at the CommunityCollege Research Center (CCRC) at Columbia University.
Energy and excitement filled the McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago, as over two thousand communitycollege leaders, faculty, and staff gathered to share stories of access, equity, and inclusion at the 2023 Dream conference. Our colleges have to be inextricably connected to our communities, leveraging our localness.
Yet there is little research on the underrepresentation of African American communitycollege trustees. However, research has demonstrated a clear underrepresentation of minority communitycollege trustees (Moltz, 2009) with no progress being made in hiring African American administrators (Levin, Walker et al.,
I am concerned about what’s happening with local school boards, policies, this misnomer that we don’t have to be worried about diversity, equity, and inclusion and we can be a ‘color blind society,’ that it’s what we should be—which is not true,” said Tchen. The progress is tangible. said Robinson.
In 2022, student leaders launched a campaign to challenge the long-standing stigma associated with attending communitycolleges. To overcome negative stereotypes, the CCSmart advocacy campaign tells the stories of students’ educational journeys and the positive impact communitycolleges had on their lives.
With downtown San Antonio as a beautiful backdrop, representatives from 24 communitycolleges in 13 states convened for the 29th Annual CommunityCollege Futures Assembly in February. Hudson County CommunityCollege (N.J.) Hudson County CommunityCollege (N.J.) Roueche and Margaretta B.
George Timmons will become president of Holyoke CommunityCollege, pending approval of the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education, MassLive reported. Dr. George Timmons Timmons is currently provost and senior vice president of academic and student affairs at Columbia-Greene CommunityCollege (CGCC).
On an unseasonably warm November weekend, people gathered on campus for a record clearing and expungement clinic organized by the CommunityCollege of Philadelphia Foundation. Across the country, the Rising Scholars Network in the California CommunityCollege system includes 83 campus programs and 24 prison programs.
We organize all of the trending information in your field so you don't have to. Join 5,000+ users and stay up to date on the latest articles your peers are reading.
You know about us, now we want to get to know you!
Let's personalize your content
Let's get even more personalized
We recognize your account from another site in our network, please click 'Send Email' below to continue with verifying your account and setting a password.
Let's personalize your content