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ECMC Foundation launches Catalyzing Transfer Initiative
Nearly $4.5M funding commitment aims to increase successful transfer of postsecondary credits and timely bachelor degree completion
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LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/ ECMC Foundation announced today the launch of the Catalyzing Transfer Initiative (CTI), a national shared learning and collaboration effort between high-impact non-profit organizations that aims to build, manage, and activate new ways to increase successful transfer of postsecondary credits and timely bachelor degree completion among marginalized racial and ethnic groups.
Only 13 percent of students who start at community college earn a bachelor s degree within six years (source: National Center for Education Statistics). As students transfer, their credits don t always follow. The CTI was created to address the challenges students face when attempting to transfer their credits to a four-year prog
Fall College Enrollment Plummets For 1st-Year Students
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Instead of going to college this fall, Brian Williams got a job at a Jimmy John s near his home in Stafford, Texas. He says paying for college was always going to be hard, but it was even harder to justify the expense during a pandemic.
(Scott Dalton for NPR)
All throughout high school, Brian Williams planned to go to college. But as the pandemic eroded the final moments of his senior year, the Stafford, Texas, student began to second-guess that plan. I m terrible at online school, Williams says. He was barely interested in logging on for his final weeks of high school; being online for his first semester at Houston Community College felt unbearable.
Originally published on December 17, 2020 2:49 pm
All throughout high school, Brian Williams planned to go to college. But as the pandemic eroded the final moments of his senior year, the Stafford, Texas, student began to second-guess that plan. I m terrible at online school, Williams says. He was barely interested in logging on for his final weeks of high school; being online for his first semester at Houston Community College felt unbearable. I know what works best for me, and doing stuff on the computer doesn t really stimulate me in the same way an actual class would.
Paying for college was always going to be hard, but it was even harder to justify the expense during a pandemic. We had no money for it, he says, and I m not trying to go into debt and pay that for the rest of my life.
Originally published on December 17, 2020 11:49 am
All throughout high school, Brian Williams planned to go to college. But as the pandemic eroded the final moments of his senior year, the Stafford, Texas, student began to second-guess that plan. I m terrible at online school, Williams says. He was barely interested in logging on for his final weeks of high school; being online for his first semester at Houston Community College felt unbearable. I know what works best for me, and doing stuff on the computer doesn t really stimulate me in the same way an actual class would.
Paying for college was always going to be hard, but it was even harder to justify the expense during a pandemic. We had no money for it, he says, and I m not trying to go into debt and pay that for the rest of my life.