Create New Ways for Colleges and Employers to Work Together
Second, COVID-19 and the expected recession will usher in a new urgency to integrate postsecondary education and work. Learners will want to find jobs as quickly as possible in the aftermath of the pandemic and recession. Before the virus outbreak, a stunning 80 percent of community college students worked—39 percent of them full time. For the students who are able to find jobs, work and learning will need to occur at the same time. College leaders will need to collaborate with employers in creating new ways to increase student access to paid, work-based learning opportunities, including apprenticeships, co-ops, and internships as the economy recovers.
As we return to whatever “normal” life becomes after the crisis, people will need jobs and employers will need skilled workers, opening the door to more college-employer partnerships. College leaders will need to be flexible by adding entry and exit points into credential pathways that will allow learners who are working to pause, stop, or restart their educations as they toggle between education and skills acquisition and work. The conventional credential pathway, where learning comes first, followed by getting a job upon graduation, won’t be feasible in the new economic reality of many Americans.