COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress: Final Look Spring 2021 Report. Fourth in the Series

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Bibliographic Details
Title: COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress: Final Look Spring 2021 Report. Fourth in the Series
Language: English
Authors: Huie, F., Lang, R., Liu, Q., Ryu, M., Shapiro, D., National Student Clearinghouse Research Center
Source: National Student Clearinghouse. 2021.
Availability: National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Available from: National Student Clearinghouse. 2300 Dulles Station Boulevard Suite 300, Herndon, VA 20171. e-mail: service@studentclearinghouse.org; Web site: http://www.studentclearinghouse.org
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 16
Publication Date: 2021
Sponsoring Agency: Ascendium Education Group, Inc.
ECMC Foundation
Document Type: Reports - Research
Numerical/Quantitative Data
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Two Year Colleges
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Transfer Students, Student Mobility, Barriers, Enrollment, College Freshmen, Reentry Students, Institutional Characteristics, Enrollment Trends, Gender Differences, Racial Differences, Ethnicity, Geographic Location, Undergraduate Students, Nontraditional Students, Community Colleges, Online Courses
Abstract: The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center reports on the shifting transfer landscape during COVID-19 in a rapid response report series titled "COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress." Two reports are issued per academic term, starting with a first look of the term, followed by the end of term update. As the fourth in the series, this edition is an end-of-term report for spring 2021. It focuses on year-over-year changes within a fixed panel of institutions that represent 94 percent of the Clearinghouse universe of institutions and 11.3 million undergraduate students (including 737,000 transfer students) reported as of April 22. As the effects of the pandemic continue to impact postsecondary institutions into late spring 2021, this research series attempts to quantify how the transfer and enrollment gaps by student characteristics that existed before the pandemic continue to be affected by these disruptions. Even before the pandemic, many college students intending to transfer struggled to manage the complexities of the transfer process, particularly those in underrepresented groups. The general dampening of student mobility during the pandemic that was first reported last fall (see ED609850) appears to continue into this spring. However, upward transfers from two-year to four-year institutions have weathered the effects of the pandemic better than all other pathways. This trend may be a reflection of ongoing efforts to streamline the transfer process during the pandemic in order to reduce inequities in access to bachelor's degrees. The data shows, however, that not all student groups have been able to leverage these opportunities. [For "COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress: First Look Spring 2021 Report. Third in the Series," see ED613207.]
Abstractor: ERIC
Entry Date: 2021
Accession Number: ED613171
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center reports on the shifting transfer landscape during COVID-19 in a rapid response report series titled "COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress." Two reports are issued per academic term, starting with a first look of the term, followed by the end of term update. As the fourth in the series, this edition is an end-of-term report for spring 2021. It focuses on year-over-year changes within a fixed panel of institutions that represent 94 percent of the Clearinghouse universe of institutions and 11.3 million undergraduate students (including 737,000 transfer students) reported as of April 22. As the effects of the pandemic continue to impact postsecondary institutions into late spring 2021, this research series attempts to quantify how the transfer and enrollment gaps by student characteristics that existed before the pandemic continue to be affected by these disruptions. Even before the pandemic, many college students intending to transfer struggled to manage the complexities of the transfer process, particularly those in underrepresented groups. The general dampening of student mobility during the pandemic that was first reported last fall (see ED609850) appears to continue into this spring. However, upward transfers from two-year to four-year institutions have weathered the effects of the pandemic better than all other pathways. This trend may be a reflection of ongoing efforts to streamline the transfer process during the pandemic in order to reduce inequities in access to bachelor's degrees. The data shows, however, that not all student groups have been able to leverage these opportunities. [For "COVID-19 Transfer, Mobility, and Progress: First Look Spring 2021 Report. Third in the Series," see ED613207.]