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Articles

The Labor Market Returns to a Community College Education for Noncompleting Students

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Pages 210-243
Received 04 Jun 2017
Accepted 06 Jun 2018
Published online: 27 Jul 2018

ABSTRACT

In this study, I used data from California to estimate the returns to a community college education that does not result in a postsecondary credential. I found strong, positive returns to completed credits in career and technical education (CTE) fields that are closely linked to employment sectors that are not credential-intensive (sectors in which employment often does not require a college degree), such as public safety, skilled blue-collar trade and technical work, and accounting and bookkeeping, among others. In these sectors, students were able to convert the human capital acquired in their coursework into returns that far exceeded the cost of the coursework itself, making some noncompleting educational pathways a rational means of securing earnings gains. This finding is consistent with emerging research on skills-builder students and other segments of the community college student population who exhibit coherent patterns of course taking and enrollment that typically do not result in a postsecondary credential. Further investigations of high-return noncompleting pathways are warranted and could help colleges to target efforts to grow postsecondary completion opportunities for students through short-term certificates programs, while also aiding efforts to communicate to stakeholders the successes that cannot be measured by counting credentials or transfers.

Acknowledgments

The author thanks Patrick Perry and the Chancellor’s Office of the California Community Colleges for authorizing and providing the data used in this study. The author also gratefully acknowledges feedback on earlier versions of this work from a number of colleagues, including Tom Bailey, Christopher Baldwin, Clive Belfield, Kathy Booth, Susan Dynarski, Ryan Fuller, Brian Jacob, Michal Kurlaender, Brian McCall, Jeff Strohl, Jessa Lewis Valentine, Alice van Ommeren, and the editors and anonymous referees of the Journal of Higher Education. Antecedents of this work were presented by the author on March 13, 2014, at the semiannual meeting of the California Community College Association for Occupational Education, and on November 21, 2014, at the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Higher Education.

Additional information

Funding

The research reported here was undertaken through the Center for Analysis of Postsecondary Education and Employment and supported by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education, through Grant R305C110011 to Teachers College, Columbia University. The opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent views of the Institute or the U.S. Department of Education.

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