When Short-Term Credentials Work
However, opinions are shifting. The work landscape in the next decade will require a pace of reskilling like nothing we have seen before. Current postsecondary systems cannot keep pace with changing job requirements and the increasing demand for skilled workers. As a result, more and more postsecondary stakeholders, including employers, community colleges, and state leaders, believe that industry-recognized credentials have significant potential to help jobseekers and workers rapidly develop skills to gain employment and progress in their careers.
At the PSN session titled “Pursuing Quality, Value, Equity and Advancement in Short-Term Credentials,” community college practitioners, state system officials, and policymakers debated the potential, risks, evidence, and outcomes of short-term credentials.
To help answer some of the unknowns, the session highlighted experiences in two states:
- Wisconsin Technical College System (WTCS) : WTCS is finding that students prioritize opportunities that lead to immediate employment, while local businesses can’t find the workers they need fast enough. WTCS is using short-term programs to meet the needs of both groups, allowing students an entry point into work and higher education while providing employers with prepared workers. In Wisconsin, students’ individual earnings have increased after they receive that first short-term credential, and system leaders have found that students are continuing their education after that first job to reskill or upskill.
- Virginia’s FastForward program: Representatives of Virginia’s Community College System (VCCS) spoke about FastForward, a state-funded program that provides scholarships for students to take short-term training courses at local community colleges. FastForward has seen strong student outcomes, including wage gains of 25-50 percent or more for graduates who earn their credential. Additionally, the state’s strong engagement with employers—requiring employer partners to identify skill and credential gaps as well as help to design curricula—has had a significant impact. Because of this collaboration with business, 98 percent of the credentials awarded in Virginia can be applied to the state’s top 12 occupations.
These two stories demonstrated the value of short-term credentials in programs that are focused on outcomes and pathways. They represented a point of consensus that resulted from the discussion—that expanding financial aid to short-term credentials makes sense when there is a focus on outcomes and pathways to longer-term credentials. Participants emphasized the importance of ensuring short-term credentials are stackable, meaning they enable students to build on initial credentials and stack their experiences to earn a higher wage, gain better employment, or continue their education down the road.