2022 RCC Factbook
Completion Deep Dive

Developed by the Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness, the Deep Dive series represents a specific drill-down of data in a user-friendly format to investigate strategic priorities and strengthen the College’s data culture, practice, and infrastructure. The Deep Dive analysis utilizes cross-section demographics to explore the various questions raised by the Factbook and support our Strategic Transformation Planning process.

Completion is IRE’s second Deep Dive topic because it is an institutional priority to improve graduation and transfer rates. Low completion rates negatively affect students’ economic mobility and progress in the education pipeline, and it also suppresses the entire prosperity of the local community. By comparing each demographic with another to identify which group(s) of students are more at risk of not completing their studies, RCC can create interventions to better assist these cohorts of students.

The Deep Dive includes visuals and tables accompanied by narrative to help put the information into context for RCC stakeholders. Below are some of the key takeaways from the analysis presented in this review.

Introduction

The Completion Deep Dive looks at the 2-year, 3-year, 4-year and 6-year graduation and transfer rates and disaggregates and compares completion rates across several sets of demographic categories (e.g., sex, race/ethnicity, age, Pell eligibility, first generation in college, and undecided in program).

The Deep Dive also looks at the types of awards students receive and the colleges to which students transfer.

Graduation rates are determined using a First-Time, Full-Time (FTFT) cohort and accounting for how long it takes a student to graduate and/or transfer to another college. FTFT students are those entering college for the first time when they come to RCC and who are enrolled in 12 or more credits in their first term. The graduation rate definition is slightly different for Associate-seeking students and Certificate-seeking students.

  • 2-year graduation rate or 100% graduation rate
    • Associate Degree – Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the summer of the second year.
    • Certificate – Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the next summer.
  • 3-year graduation rate or 150% graduation rate
    • Associate Degree – Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the summer of the third year.
    • Certificate – Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the next fall.
  • 4-year graduation rate is the same for both Associate and Certificate seeking students
    • Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the summer of the fourth year.
  • 6-year graduation rate is the same for both Associate and Certificate seeking students
    • Starts in the fall and checks to see if a student graduates or transfers by the end of the summer of the sixth year.

For example: an Associate-seeking student starting in the Fall 2015 would have to graduate or transfer by the end of summer in 2017 to count in the 2-year graduation rate and graduate by the end of Summer 2018 to count in the 3-year graduation rate.

The 3-year graduation rate, or 150% of a 2-year program, is the time period that is most often used by 2-year community colleges. Most students that are going to graduate do so by their third year. Looking at the RCC Fall 2016 cohort after three years, 30% of RCC students graduate. By year six, the rate only increases by 7%, up to 37%.

The Completion Deep Dive reviews both graduation and transfer data. As noted, any student who graduates or transfers is considered a successful completion; however, research indicates that there are advantages to students receiving a degree before they transfer. Graduates have a better chance of completing their subsequent degree and they hold an earned credential. Reviewing how graduates and transfers make up the completion rate data provides RCC with important information that can be used to increase retention and student success.

Graduates and Transfers are divided into four categories.

  1. Graduate and Transfer
  2. Graduate without transferring
  3. Transfer without graduating
  4. Not completing

Years to Complete

Most community colleges use a 3-year, 150%, completion rate. One of the reasons is that the biggest change in completion and graduation rates happens between year two and year three. Looking at the Fall 2016 cohort, the completion rate increases by 30 percentage points between year two and year three, moving from 23% to 53%. There is only a 10-percentage point increase between year three and year six.

Years to Completion from Fall 2016

No Data Found

Graduation and Transfer Rate by Years to Complete
Fall 2016 Cohort
Student Category 2 Years 3 Years 4 Years 6 Years
Graduate and Transfer 1% 18% 23% 28%
Graduate Only 13% 12% 10% 9%
Transfer Only 9% 23% 24% 26%
Did Not Complete 77% 48% 42% 38%

Total

Total 2-Year (100%) Completion Rates

The percentage of students that graduate in two years increased from 15% (Fall 2015) to 17% (Fall 2019) while the percentage of students that transfer without graduating decreased from 10% (Fall 2015) to 6% (Fall 2019).

2-year Graduation and Transfer Rates

No Data Found

2-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Graduate and Transfer 9 (1%) 7 (1%) 9 (1%) 8 (1%) 8 (1%)
Graduate Only 183 (14%) 177 (13%) 183 (15%) 171 (14%) 197 (16%)
Transfer Only 139 (10%) 117 (9%) 89 (7%) 91 (7%) 76 (6%)
Did Not Complete 1,013 (75%) 1,014 (77%) 952 (77%) 957 (78%) 933 (77%)
Total 1,344 1,315 1,233 1,227 1,214

Total 3-Year (150%) Completion Rates

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates

No Data Found

The overall completion, graduation and transfer rates have not varied much over the past 5 years. The overall completion rate was 51% for Fall 2015 and was 50% for the Fall 2019 cohort.

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Graduate and Transfer 214 (16%) 232 (18%) 202 (16%) 189 (15%) 212 (17%)
Graduate Only 186 (14%) 152 (12%) 154 (12%) 143 (12%) 144 (12%)
Transfer Only 285 (21%) 298 (23%) 254 (21%) 300 (24%) 255 (21%)
Did Not Complete 659 (49%) 633 (48%) 623 (51%) 595 (48%) 603 (50%)
Total 1,344 1,315 1,233 1,227 1,214

Total 4-Year Completion Rates

The total completion rate dropped 2 percentage points from 60% (Fall 2015) to 58% (Fall 2018) while the graduate and transfer rate dropped 4 percentage points from 24% (Fall 2015) to 20% (Fall 2018) indicating that after a four-year period a larger percentage of students transfer without graduating.

4-year Graduation and Transfer Rates

No Data Found

4-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018
Graduate and Transfer 329 (24%) 306 (23%) 269 (22%) 242 (20%)
Graduate Only 149 (11%) 134 (10%) 130 (11%) 152 (12%)
Transfer Only 325 (24%) 322 (24%) 290 (24%) 319 (26%)
Did Not Complete 541 (40%) 553 (42%) 544 (44%) 514 (42%)
Total 1,344 1,315 1,233 1,227

Total 6-Year Completion Rates

6-year Graduation and Transfer Rates

No Data Found

The 6-year completion rate for Fall 2016 is only 2 percentage points higher than the 4-year graduation rate. Overall, only a few additional students complete between the fourth and sixth year.

6-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016
Graduate and Transfer 388 (29%) 367 (28%)
Graduate Only 137 (10%) 113 (9%)
Transfer Only 361 (27%) 339 (26%)
Did Not Complete 458 (34%) 496 (38%)
Total 1,344 1,315

Summary

After three years of college, slightly more than 20% of RCC FTFT students transfer without graduating. This rate is higher than the percentage of students that graduate and transfer or only graduate. Most of the completers between year 3 and year 6 graduate and transfer rather than graduate only or transfer only.

Completion by Sex

The overall completion rate is higher for women than for men. In addition, completion rates for women increased in 2018 and 2019 over prior years while rates for men decreased. The 3-year completion rate for women in the Fall 2019 cohort is 15 percentage points higher at 59% compared to 43% for men.

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Sex (Female)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Sex (Male)

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Sex
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Female Graduate and Transfer 118 (19%) 120 (20%) 108 (19%) 116 (20%) 120 (23%)
Female Graduate Only 103 (16%) 72 (12%) 70 (12%) 77 (13%) 69 (13%)
Female Transfer Only 138 (22%) 137 (23%) 123 (21%) 144 (25%) 122 (23%)
Female Did Not Complete 277 (44%) 270 (45%) 279 (48%) 237 (41%) 218 (41%)
Female Total 636 599 580 574 529
Male Graduate and Transfer 96 (14%) 112 (16%) 94 (14%) 73 (11%) 92 (13%)
Male Graduate Only 83 (12%) 80 (11%) 84 (13%) 66 (10%) 75 (11%)
Male Transfer Only 147 (21%) 161 (22%) 131 (20%) 156 (24%) 133 (19%)
Male Did Not Complete 382 (54%) 363 (51%) 344 (53%) 358 (55%) 385 (56%)
Male Total 708 716 653 653 685

Completion by Race/Ethnicity

At the three-year mark for the Fall 2019 cohort, White students have a significantly higher completion rate, at 60%, than Black and Hispanic students, both at 43%.

Hispanic students tend to graduate without transferring at a higher rate than both Black and White students.

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Race/Ethnicity (Black)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Race/Ethnicity (Hispanic)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Race/Ethnicity (White)

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Race/Ethnicity
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Black Graduate and Transfer 26 (11%) 30 (13%) 20 (9%) 23 (11%) 34 (16%)
Black Graduate Only 28 (12%) 24 (10%) 23 (10%) 19 (9%) 19 (9%)
Black Transfer Only 39 (17%) 50 (21%) 33 (15%) 45 (21%) 37 (18%)
Black Did Not Complete 143 (61%) 132 (56%) 148 (66%) 132 (60%) 117 (57%)
Black Total 236 236 224 219 207
Hispanic Graduate and Transfer 47 (13%) 58 (16%) 53 (15%) 61 (14%) 55 (13%)
Hispanic Graduate Only 49 (14%) 42 (12%) 42 (12%) 49 (12%) 62 (14%)
Hispanic Transfer Only 47 (13%) 61 (17%) 52 (15%) 91 (21%) 66 (15%)
Hispanic Did Not Complete 209 (59%) 200 (55%) 195 (57%) 225 (53%) 245 (57%)
Hispanic Total 352 361 342 426 428
White Graduate and Transfer 98 (19%) 102 (21%) 93 (21%) 73 (18%) 97 (25%)
White Graduate Only 72 (14%) 51 (10%) 57 (13%) 55 (13%) 32 (8%)
White Transfer Only 141 (27%) 137 (28%) 112 (26%) 130 (31%) 105 (27%)
White Did Not Complete 203 (39%) 200 (41%) 176 (40%) 156 (38%) 157 (40%)
White Total 514 490 438 414 391

Completion by Age

In the Fall 2019 cohort, students 25 or older have a 3-year completion rate that is about 20 percentage points lower than the completion rate for students under 25. Completers over 25 are more likely to graduate only or transfer only. Relatively small percentages of 25-year-old completers are graduating and transferring.

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Age (Under 25)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Age (25 and over)

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Age
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Under 25 Graduate and Transfer 213 (16%) 228 (18%) 196 (17%) 188 (16%) 209 (18%)
Under 25 Graduate Only 182 (14%) 144 (12%) 148 (13%) 136 (12%) 137 (12%)
Under 25 Transfer Only 280 (22%) 290 (23%) 248 (21%) 288 (25%) 247 (21%)
Under 25 Did Not Complete 619 (48%) 587 (47%) 569 (49%) 556 (48%) 564 (49%)
Under 25 Total 1,294 1,249 1,161 1,168 1,157
25 and Over Graduate and Transfer 1 (2%) 4 (6%) 6 (8%) 1 (2%) 3 (5%)
25 and Over Graduate Only 4 (8%) 8 (12%) 6 (8%) 7 (12%) 7 (12%)
25 and Over Transfer Only 5 (10%) 8 (12%) 6 (8%) 12 (20%) 8 (14%)
25 and Over Did Not Complete 40 (80%) 46 (70%) 54 (75%) 39 (66%) 39 (68%)
25 and Over Total 50 66 72 59 57

Completion by Pell Status

Pell recipients have overall lower completion rates than other students. In the Fall 2019 cohort, Pell recipients’ 3-year completion rate lagged 14 percentage points behind other students. However, Pell recipients make up some ground over the years and decrease the difference in their completion rates as compared to other students. For instance, in the Fall 2015 cohort, the completion rates differed by 14 percentage points at 3-years but diminished to 10 percentage points at the 6-year mark.

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Pell Status (No Pell)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Pell Status (Pell Recipients)

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Pell Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
No Pell Graduate and Transfer 157 (19%) 149 (17%) 135 (18%) 120 (15%) 151 (20%)
No Pell Graduate Only 105 (13%) 99 (12%) 92 (12%) 87 (11%) 79 (11%)
No Pell Transfer Only 206 (25%) 220 (26%) 171 (23%) 212 (27%) 182 (25%)
No Pell Did Not Complete 371 (44%) 390 (45%) 353 (47%) 359 (46%) 329 (44%)
No Pell Total 839 858 751 778 741
Pell Recipient Graduate and Transfer 57 (11%) 83 (18%) 67 (14%) 69 (15%) 61 (13%)
Pell Recipient Graduate Only 81 (16%) 53 (12%) 62 (13%) 56 (12%) 65 (14%)
Pell Recipient Transfer Only 79 (16%) 78 (17%) 83 (17%) 88 (20%) 73 (15%)
Pell Recipient Did Not Complete 288 (57%) 243 (53%) 270 (56%) 236 (53%) 274 (58%)
Pell Recipient Total 505 457 482 449 473

6-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Pell Status
(No Pell)

No Data Found

6-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Pell Status
(Pell Recipient)

No Data Found

6-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Pell Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2016
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016
No Pell Graduate and Transfer 244 (29%) 229 (27%)
No Pell Graduate Only 92 (11%) 78 (9%)
No Pell Transfer Only 249 (30%) 247 (29%)
No Pell Did Not Complete 254 (30%) 304 (35%)
No Pell Total 839 858
Pell Recipient Graduate and Transfer 144 (29%) 138 (30%)
Pell Recipient Graduate Only 45 (9%) 35 (8%)
Pell Recipient Transfer Only 112 (22%) 92 (20%)
Pell Recipient Did Not Complete 204 (40%) 192 (42%)
Pell Recipient Total 505 457

Completion by First-Generation Status

Both the First-Generation 3-year and 4-year completion rates increased by around 20% points between 2017 and 2018.

Like Pell recipients, First-Generation completers make up some ground over the years. For instance, in the Fall 2016 cohort, First Generation students lag other students by 24 percentage points at 3-years; but by 6-years out, they have closed the gap to 13 percentage points.

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(Not First-Generation)

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(First Generation Students)

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by First-Generation Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
Not First Gen Graduate and Transfer 209 (16%) 220 (18%) 199 (18%) 166 (17%) 162 (19%)
Not First Gen Graduate Only 177 (14%) 145 (12%) 141 (13%) 108 (11%) 97 (11%)
Not First Gen Transfer Only 276 (22%) 283 (24%) 238 (22%) 260 (26%) 209 (24%)
Not First Gen Did Not Complete 616 (48%) 554 (46%) 517 (47%) 469 (47%) 404 (46%)
Not First Gen Total 1,278 1,202 1,095 1,003 872
First Generation Graduate and Transfer 5 (8%) 12 (11%) 3 (2%) 23 (10%) 50 (15%)
First Generation Graduate Only 9 (14%) 7 (6%) 13 (9%) 35 (16%) 47 (14%)
First Generation Transfer Only 9 (14%) 15 (13%) 16 (12%) 40 (18%) 46 (13%)
First Generation Did Not Complete 43 (65%) 79 (70%) 106 (77%) 126 (56%) 199 (58%)
First Generation Total 66 113 138 224 342

4-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(Not First Generation)

No Data Found

4-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(First Generation Students)

No Data Found

4-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by First-Generation Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2018
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018
Not First Gen Graduate and Transfer 321 (25%) 292 (24%) 255 (23%) 203 (20%)
Not First Gen Graduate Only 141 (11%) 126 (10%) 109 (10%) 109 (11%)
Not First Gen Transfer Only 315 (25%) 306 (25%) 271 (25%) 275 (27%)
Not First Gen Did Not Complete 501 (39%) 478 (40%) 460 (42%) 416 (41%)
Not First Gen Total 1,278 1,202 1,095 1,003
First Generation Graduate and Transfer 8 (12%) 14 (12%) 14 (10%) 39 (17%)
First Generation Graduate Only 8 (12%) 8 (7%) 21 (15%) 43 (19%)
First Generation Transfer Only 10 (15%) 16 (14%) 19 (14%) 44 (20%)
First Generation Did Not Complete 40 (61%) 75 (66%) 84 (61%) 98 (44%)
First Generation Total 66 113 138 224

6-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(Not First Generation)

No Data Found

6-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by First-Generation Status
(First Generation Students)

No Data Found

6-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by First-Generation Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2016
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016
Not First Gen Graduate and Transfer 375 (29%) 343 (29%)
Not First Gen Graduate Only 127 (10%) 97 (8%)
Not First Gen Transfer Only 351 (27%) 321 (27%)
Not First Gen Did Not Complete 425 (33%) 441 (37%)
Not First Gen Total 1,278 1,202
First Generation Graduate and Transfer 13 (20%) 24 (21%)
First Generation Graduate Only 10 (15%) 16 (14%)
First Generation Transfer Only 10 (15%) 18 (16%)
First Generation Did Not Complete 33 (50%) 55 (49%)
First Generation Total 66 113

Completion by Undecided Status

In the Fall 2019 cohort, the 3-year completion rate for students who were undecided in their first term is about 3 percentage points lower than the completion rate for students that start their college experience in a declared program.  

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Students in Programs

No Data Found

3-year Graduation and Transfer Rates by Undecided Students

No Data Found

3-Year Graduation and Transfer Analysis by Undecided Status
Fall Cohort 2015-2019
Student Category Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019
In Program Graduate and Transfer 163 (16%) 186 (19%) 162 (17%) 158 (16%) 188 (19%)
In Program Graduate Only 142 (14%) 119 (12%) 124 (13%) 111 (11%) 119 (12%)
In Program Transfer Only 216 (21%) 217 (22%) 199 (21%) 245 (25%) 203 (20%)
In Program Did Not Complete 509 (49%) 465 (47%) 442 (48%) 464 (47%) 492 (49%)
In Program Total 1,030 987 927 978 1,002
Undecided Graduate and Transfer 51 (16%) 46 (14%) 40 (13%) 31 (12%) 24 (11%)
Undecided Graduate Only 44 (14%) 33 (10%) 30 (10%) 32 (13%) 25 (12%)
Undecided Transfer Only 69 (22%) 81 (25%) 55 (18%) 55 (22%) 52 (25%)
Undecided Did Not Complete 150 (48%) 168 (51%) 181 (59%) 131 (53%) 111 (52%)
Undecided Total 314 328 306 249 212

Credits at Graduation

In order to graduate with an associate degree, a student is required to earn approximately 60 credits. Students may earn more than 60 credits if the student’s program requires pre-requisite courses. Or a student may take extra courses, either erroneously or due to a change in curriculum, that do not count towards their program of study. When a student takes more credits, it costs the student time and money.

In academic year 2022, students under 25 years, Hispanic students, and male students graduated with fewer accumulated credits than the overall average and the averages of the other cohorts. The most startling data indicates that students 25 and older completed 7 more credits, on average, to earn their degree than their younger counterparts.

Credits at Graduation

No Data Found

Accumulated Credits Earned at Graduation
Mean (Count)
Student Category AY 2018 AY 2019 AY 2020 AY 2021 AY 2022
Total 68.4 (888) 68.5 (883) 68.8 (862) 69.3 (850) 69.2 (814)
Age: Less than 25 67.2 (648) 67.0 (628) 67.4 (601) 67.5 (599) 67.3 (579)
Age: 25 and Older 71.8 (240) 72.8 (255) 72.1 (261) 73.8 (251) 74.1 (235)
Sex: Female 68.2 (502) 68.4 (464) 69.7 (490) 69.7 (498) 70.8 (429)
Sex: Male 68.5 (386) 68.6 (419) 67.6 (372) 68.8 (352) 67.3 (385)
Race/Ethnicity: Black or African American 68.3 (144) 67.6 (136) 69.1 (151) 69.6 (133) 70.3 (118)
Race/Ethnicity: Hispanic of any race 68.1 (212) 68.5 (207) 67.9 (235) 68.5 (231) 67.4 (247)
Race/Ethnicity: White 67.5 (367) 67.9 (371) 68.8 (335) 69.3 (341) 69.4 (289)

4-Year Transfer Institutions

For students who started as first-time, full-time students between 2015 and 2019 and transferred to a 4-year institution by August 2022, the highest percent, 11%, transferred to Saint Thomas Aquinas College. More students transferred to STAC than all the CUNY schools combined. 40.5% of FTFT students transferred to a 4-year SUNY school and 10.2% transferred to a 4-year CUNY school.

Transfers to 4-Year Institutions

No Data Found

Transfers to 4-Year Institutions
School Transfers Percent of Total
Saint Thomas Aquinas College 308 11%
SUNY New Paltz 202 7%
Dominican University 173 6%
SUNY Binghamton University 132 5%
SUNY University at Albany 125 4%
SUNY University at Buffalo 105 4%
Mercy College 104 4%
SUNY Purchase College 92 3%
SUNY Cortland 82 3%
CUNY John Jay College of Criminal Justice 76 3%
SUNY Oneonta 76 3%
SUNY Cobleskill 69 2%
CUNY Baruch College 65 2%
Ramapo College of New Jersey 65 2%
SUNY Stony Brook University 52 2%
CUNY Hunter College 48 2%
SUNY Oswego 45 2%
Pace University 37 1%
SUNY Fashion Institute of Technology 34 1%
CUNY City College 31 1%

2-Year Transfer Institutions

Some RCC students, who started as first-time, full-time students between 2015 and 2019, transferred to 2-year institutions. Over 65% of these students transferred to another SUNY 2-year institution, with 34% transferring to Orange County Community College.

Transfers to 2-Year Institutions

No Data Found

Transfers to 2-Year Institutions
School Transfers Percent of Total
SUNY Orange County Community College 153 34%
SUNY Westchester Community College 73 16%
Bergen Community College 30 7%
SUNY Sullivan 17 4%
CUNY Borough of Manhattan Community College 11 2%
SUNY Hudson Valley Community College 9 2%
Eastern Gateway Community College 8 2%
SUNY Dutchess Community College 8 2%
SUNY Broome Community College 6 1%
SUNY Mohawk Valley Community College 6 1%
SUNY Tompkins Cortland Community College 5 1%
Nassau Community College 4 1%
CUNY Bronx Community College 3 1%
CUNY Kingsborough Community College 3 1%
CUNY Queensborough Community College 3 1%
SUNY Ulster 3 1%
Sussex County Community College 3 1%

Considerations for Action

  • Given the need to increase completion and support student success, how might we deepen our investment and provide additional support toward student completion?
  • Given that students 25 or older have a 3-year completion rate that is about 20 percentage points lower than the completion rate for students under 25, how might we help this demographic increase their completion rates?
  • Over the past few years, the number of credits at graduation has increased for certain populations. The College needs to continue to investigate completion credits by cohort to better support students to complete their degree expeditiously.