Advising Model Boosts Community College Retention as Students Flee 4-Year Degree
The guided pathways model shows promising results for two-year programs as a new report reveals more students leaving four-year schools.
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A has found a continuing trend of students leaving four-year colleges compared to two-year programs 鈥 with experts pointing to a successful advising model in helping to increase community college retention.
The found by the start of the 2022-23 academic year the number of students who left their respective college grew to nearly 37 million 鈥 a 2.9 percent growth compared to the previous year.
But the overall number of students ages 18 to 64 leaving was largely seen in four-year schools compared to two-year programs.
Josh Wyner, founder and executive director of the , said the advising model utilized at community colleges across the country has contributed to their retention by developing an individualized plan for students to schedule classes and monitor progress.

鈥淲hat that means is [community colleges] have created a much clearer pathway to a degree and restructured their advising systems to ensure students get on those pathways early on,鈥 Wyner told 蜜桃影视, noting schools such as the and in Texas as prime examples of successful models.
Laurel Williamson, deputy chancellor and president at San Jacinto College, said the advising model is particularly helpful for first generation college students.
鈥淚t used to be just giving the student a schedule or telling them to go online and pick some classes 鈥 that鈥檚 crazy,鈥 Williamson told 蜜桃影视. 鈥淪tudents don’t know how to pick classes鈥and] we weren’t consciously thinking about it from the student experience side.鈥

Today nearly 400 community colleges in 16 states have implemented guided pathways reforms, according to the that designed the advising system in 2015.
鈥淕uided pathways have enabled community colleges to reduce the number of students leaving and therefore having less of a population of 鈥榮ome college no degree鈥 adults,鈥 Wyner added.
Williamson said Texas has been 鈥減roactive鈥 about using guided pathways, noting 48 of the 50 community colleges have adopted the advising system.
鈥淸Guided] pathways bring you to focus on what is really important in terms of student completion and student goals,鈥 Williamson said. 鈥淚t could be a one year certificate, it could be an associate degree. But to boil that down, it is entry into the workforce at a family sustaining wage or an on-ramp to transfer with no loss of credits and junior status at a university.鈥
Since adopting the model in 2016, Williamson said the key benefit for students is the 鈥渢hought out鈥 academic advising.
鈥淚f you come in and say 鈥業 want to be a communications major and I want to transfer to the University of Houston-Clear Lake campus we map out the whole trajectory from your entry here to your completion of a bachelor’s degree at Clear Lake so there’s no confusion,鈥 Williamson said.
Mike Flores, chancellor at the , agreed with Williamson and emphasized how the advising system is flexible if a student decides to change their major.
鈥淚f the catalog changes, the core requirements change or anything in the general education requirements change at the receiving institution, then our folks are some of the first to know and they then revise the advising guide accordingly,鈥 Flores told 蜜桃影视.
Guided pathways have helped drive down the schools鈥 degree completion rates from 4.4 to 3.6 years.
鈥淲e know time is the enemy of degree completion for our students because education is just one of multiple commitments that they have in their lives,鈥 Flores said, noting that 65 percent of his students are part-time and taking two to three courses each term.
鈥淚t鈥檚 saving them time and it鈥檚 saving them money, and in turn, we see more students graduating,鈥 Flores said.
Growth in Students Leaving College
The report found the number of students leaving a public four-year school increased by 2.9 percent. But public two-year schools decreased by 4.1 percent 鈥 or 52,100 students.
The report also noted the population of students leaving college continues to be less white and more male than the overall undergraduate population 鈥 with Latino and Black students disproportionately represented.
Latino and Black students were 24.4 and 19.1 percent of the students leaving college compared to being 21.5 and 14 percent of all enrolled undergraduates in the 2022-23 academic year.
Wyner believes this disparity is due to students鈥 enrollment patterns, noting that Black, Latino, Native American and low-income students often don’t choose majors that lead to well paying jobs.
鈥淲hen we look at which programs those populations are engaged in, they tend to be in programs of study that are less likely to lead to a job with a family-sustaining wage or for a community college student to get a bachelor鈥檚 degree,鈥 Wyner said, such as general studies which signals students are entering school without a clear post-graduate plan.
He added that community colleges using guided pathways have seen an increase in degree completion because of their emphasis on career advising.
鈥溾嬧媁hen students don’t have a promise that the degree and programs they’re enrolled in are likely to lead to strong outcomes, then the chances they’re going to drop out are likely to be much greater,鈥 Wyner said.
鈥淚f I don’t see a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow,鈥 said Wyner, 鈥渨hy continue to travel across that rainbow?鈥
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