1. Powerhouse partnerships that permanently change how education and industry collaborate
TAACCCT didn’t invent the idea of cross-sector partnerships. But it did expand them dramatically—by making them a requirement for use of TAACCCT funds.
Longstanding evidence shows the success of efforts in which education, business, workforce development, and community-based organizations (CBOs) work closely together to meet the immediate training needs of jobseekers and employers. Hundreds of these partnerships were formed to meet TAACCCT’s rules, and they designed programs that helped adults gain the skills in greatest demand in local industries such as manufacturing, IT, health care, transportation, and energy. But not all of the partnerships had staying power.
To overcome the next recession, we need to ensure that cross-sector partnerships are built to last across states and regions so they can create career opportunities for individuals and workforce solutions for employers far into the future.
Several states succeeded in using TAACCCT funds to build such systems. Montana built a statewide apprenticeship system for health care workers. Ohio and Iowa colleges collaborated with business to build statewide talent pipelines in manufacturing. And in Maryland, colleges and workforce boards established lasting relationships with more than 250 IT employers to create career pathways to jobs in cybersecurity.
Strong leadership made a huge difference. In states where community college presidents, industry representatives, workforce system leaders, state officials, and CBOs were deeply engaged, the partnerships drove lasting change. The rules accompanying any new stimulus funding must require not only cross-sector partnerships, but also the close involvement of sector leaders who emphasize long-term systemic transformation
2. An entirely new approach to education and training for adult learners
It is becoming widely acknowledged that the traditional college model, with classes based on a semester schedule, doesn’t work for adults aiming to gain new skills while juggling jobs—or a job search—and family responsibilities. Nor does it work for employers. Neither can afford to wait weeks or months until a new semester begins, and the rigid class schedules are difficult to fit into adults’ busy lives.
Understanding this reality, TAACCCT urged participating colleges to draw on evidence about the types of programs and services that help adult learners succeed. For example, TAACCCT encouraged the development of flexible programs that allow adults to access education in convenient locations at convenient times, in accelerated formats and online. Again, TAACCCT didn’t invent these strategies. But it did fund their expansion.
Furthermore, several states created systemwide reforms to implement high-impact strategies, so that all students would benefit, not just those in TAACCCT-funded programs. For example, Missouri, Wisconsin, Colorado, and Rhode Island developed statewide policies supporting what is known as credit for prior learning. Those policies made it possible for adults to enter college having accumulated credit for skills they already possess, eliminating the need to take courses on material they already know. And some colleges scaled TAACCCT innovations across their entire institutions. In Ohio, Sinclair Community College built extensive competency-based programs that reward students based on skills gained, not just time spent in a classroom.
Unfortunately, in many places, such models were the exception, not the rule. They weren’t adopted widely enough to benefit the majority of students. Any new stimulus package with funds for workforce development must require states and colleges to use practices that have been proven successful with adult learners and to scale them systemwide. From now on, evidence-based models must be the rule, not the exception.
3. Remove policy barriers that block transformation
Why is it that accelerated-learning models expanded under TAACCCT were never fully scaled up? The answer is as clear as it is frustrating: The policies that support postsecondary education and workforce development, at the institutional, state, and federal levels, were designed for traditional approaches.
Staff who want to design a single innovative program can often find a way. But to scale and sustain innovative designs, we need meaningful change in a host of policies governing program approval, accreditation, and financial aid, to name just a few.
Some states did make policy changes that encouraged the scale of innovative models under TAACCCT. For example, several states enacted new policies for measuring college readiness, so more adults could avoid remedial classes and start college-level coursework immediately. Other states, including Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Massachusetts, approved policies that enabled the creation of cross-sector data systems that measured the employment outcomes of community college students. Better data collection has been critical to ensuring that programs keep pace with industry needs.
Any new stimulus package will have greater impact if it is accompanied by a commitment at the state and federal levels to change policies that stand in the way of efforts to implement innovations that help more adults acquire skills that matter in the workplace.