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Experimental Evidence of the Impact of Re-Enrollment Campaigns on Long-Term Academic Outcomes

Most students who begin at a community college do not complete their desired credential. Many former students fail to graduate due to various barriers rather than their academic performance. To encourage previously successful non-completers to re-enroll and eventually graduate, a growing number of community colleges have implemented re-enrollment campaigns focused on former students who have already made substantial progress toward graduation. In this study, we randomly assigned over 27,000 former community college students to a control group, “information-only” treatment group, or “information and one-course waiver” treatment group to examine whether re-enrollment campaigns can improve their likelihood of long-term persistence and credential completion. Although we showed in earlier work that the “information and one-course waiver” treatment had a positive impact on former students’ likelihood of re-enrollment, our findings reveal the re-enrollment intervention has no effect on students’ likelihood of long-term persistence or credential completion for the pooled sample or any subgroup of interest, including low-income students, racially minoritized students, or adult students. Simply put, this particular re-enrollment intervention including one-time, one-course tuition waivers increased former students’ likelihood of re-enrollment but was not an effective lever to increase long-term academic outcomes among previously successful community college students who departed early without earning a credential.

Keywords
higher education, community colleges, re-enrollment, persistence, graduation
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/q7zs-tk31

EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:

Ortagus, Justin C., Hope Allchin, Benjamin Skinner, Melvin Tanner, and Isaac McFarlin. (). Experimental Evidence of the Impact of Re-Enrollment Campaigns on Long-Term Academic Outcomes. (EdWorkingPaper: 24-973). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/q7zs-tk31

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