New Briefs Examine Promising Practices and Opportunities for Supporting Adult Learners
Since 2021, the Belk Center for Community College Leadership and Research has gathered data, stories and lessons learned from colleges participating in NC Reconnect – the initiative to re-engage and enroll adult learners in North Carolina community colleges. The Belk Center, in partnership with the John M. Belk Endowment (JMBE), the North Carolina Community College System and myFutureNC, released a comprehensive Adult Learner Guidebook last year that synthesized key takeaways from the program’s first cohort of five colleges participating in NC Reconnect.
This year, the Belk Center is launching a series of research briefs that expands on the Adult Learner Guidebook and includes learnings from cohorts one and two.
The briefs examine promising practices and opportunities identified by the first ten colleges of NC Reconnect. Each brief covers a single topic area from the adult learner efforts and provides relevant examples of how colleges implemented NC Reconnect across their campuses. The first four briefs highlight:
- Key leadership decisions to consider when launching a campus-wide initiative
- Using funding to enhance NC Reconnect efforts
- Recruiting techniques to reach and re-engage adult learners
- How colleges are incorporating strategies learned from NC Reconnect across their institutions
Information in each brief was gathered during interviews with college presidents, leadership teams, staff, faculty and adult learners. As NC Reconnect efforts grow across the state, the Belk Center will continue engaging cohorts to identify opportunities and promising practices as colleges enhance how they reach adult learners.
About NC Reconnect
In 2021, the John M. Belk Endowment (JMBE) launched NC Reconnect – an initiative aimed at re-engaging and enrolling adult learners in North Carolina community colleges. In addition to JMBE and the Belk Center, various partners collaborate to elevate the efforts of NC Reconnect, including myFutureNC and the North Carolina Community College System.
The goal of NC Reconnect was simple – ensure adult learners across North Carolina have maximum opportunity to pursue training at one of the state’s 58 community colleges. Starting with five community colleges of various sizes and geographic locations, NC Reconnect soon grew to ten colleges. By November 2022, five additional colleges were added, making it the initiative’s third cohort.
NC Reconnect consists of two major components: re-engage adult students who previously earned some college credit but left without a credential, and deliver targeted communication to prospective adult students within the colleges’ service areas.
The majority of higher-wage jobs require more than a high school diploma, yet less than half of North Carolinians between the ages of 25-44 have earned the credentials needed to access those jobs. To easily highlight upskilling opportunities and a student’s return on investment, Better Skills. Better Jobs. became the official outreach campaign message of NC Reconnect.
At the heart of NC Reconnect are North Carolinians ages 25-44 who have some college but no degree. Re-engaging those individuals is about more than boosting enrollment – it’s about providing skills and training that lead to better jobs. And at the end of the day, it’s celebrating the power of education to transform lives and communities.
MC Belk Pilon, JMBE’s president and board chair echoed those sentiments.
“We think we can help them get across the finish line and increase their economic mobility. Closing the attainment gap inherently helps us close the equity gap.”
About the Belk Center
Creating tools, convening leaders, and catalyzing change: the Belk Center for Community College Leadership and Research works with educators, researchers, and policymakers to further more equitable community college outcomes in North Carolina and across the nation. We equip community college leaders with actionable insights and create opportunities for collaboration as we tackle the most pressing issues facing students and campuses to build stronger, more resilient communities. The Belk Center is housed in the College of Education at North Carolina State University, a land-grant university that shares our commitment to community colleges and the critical role these institutions play in creating and expanding opportunities for all North Carolinians.
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