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Use Both Credit and Noncredit Programs for Workforce Development' which 
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Report to the Chairman, Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
Pensions, U.S. Senate:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

October 2004:

Public Community Colleges and Technical Schools:

Most Schools Use Both Credit and Noncredit Programs for Workforce 
Development:

GAO-05-04:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-4, a report to the Chairman, Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions, U.S. Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The goal of most American workers—a well-paying job—will be 
increasingly linked to adequate training in the coming years. Such 
training will be key to competing for the 21 million new jobs the 
Department of Labor projects will be created in the 2002 to 2012 
period. People already in, or seeking to enter, the workforce often 
turn to the nation’s more than 1,100 public community colleges and 
technical schools to obtain needed skills. Nearly 6 million students 
were enrolled in for-credit courses in the fall term 2000 and millions 
more participated in noncredit courses at these schools. GAO was asked 
to examine: (1) the extent to which community colleges and technical 
schools are involved in remedial education and workforce training 
efforts as well as academic preparation activities; (2) how state and 
federal funding support these academic and training efforts; and (3) 
what is known about schools’ efforts to measure outcomes, including the 
rates at which students graduate, transfer to 4-year institutions, pass
occupational licensing exams, and gain employment.

The scope of our review included a Web-based survey of 1,070 public 
community colleges and technical schools, 758 (71 percent) of which 
completed the survey.

What GAO Found:

The majority of community colleges and technical schools are offering a 
broad spectrum of academic and training programs—everything from 
traditional courses for degree-seeking students to remedial education 
and contract training customized for individual employers. In addition, 
61 percent of schools offer noncredit occupational, professional, or 
technical training.

Prevalence of Types of Programs at Community Colleges and Technical 
Schools in the Fall Term of 2002: 

[See PDF for image]

[A] Contract training data are for the 2002-03 academic year.

[End of figure]

States have long provided the greatest share of funding for public 
community colleges–between 40 and 45 percent of schools’ total revenue, 
while federal funding, exclusive of student financial assistance, has 
been much smaller–about 5 percent. Most states provide more funding for 
credit programs than noncredit programs. 

Most community colleges and technical schools track some education and 
employment outcomes for their students, but differences in state
reporting requirements preclude aggregating these outcomes nationally. 
However, national studies of representative samples or cohorts of 
students conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics show 
that between half and two-thirds of community college students seeking 
some type of academic or occupational credential succeed in 
transferring to a 4-year institution or earning a degree, license, 
certificate, or diploma within 6 to 8 years of initiating studies. 
GAO’s survey indicated that more than half of students enrolled in 
remedial and 3 types of basic skills courses completed them 
successfully.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-4.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact David D. Bellis at (415) 
904-2272 or bellisd@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Community Colleges and Technical Schools Have Expanded Roles in 
Educating and Training the Nation's Workforce:

State Funding to Schools Dominated but Varied by Type of Program; 
Federal Funding Provided a Much Smaller Share:

Differences in Community College and Technical School and State Data 
Collection Efforts Place Reliance on National Studies for Measuring 
Overall Student Outcomes:

Concluding Observations:

Agency Comments:

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

The Survey:

The Study Population:

Developing the Survey:

Administering the Survey:

Nonsampling Error:

Response Rates:

Site Visits:

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Staff Acknowledgments:

Tables:

Table 1: Overview of Basic Types of Credit and Noncredit Programs:

Table 2: Funding Received by Community Colleges and Technical Schools 
under Nine Federal Programs as Reported by Survey Respondents for 
Fiscal Year 2003.

Table 3: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools Tracking 
Education or Employment Outcomes for Three Types of Programs for All 
Students or a Representative Sample in 2002-03:

Table 4: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools Tracking 
Four Types of Outcomes for Students Who Completed below College-Level 
(Remedial) and Basic Skills Courses and Percent of Responding Schools 
That Provided Data:

Table 5: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools That Used 
Each of Three Methods to Track Outcomes for Students Who Completed 
Three Types of Programs:

Table 6: Percent of Students Passing below College-Level (Remedial) and 
Three Types of Basic Skills Courses during Fall Term of 2002 and 
Percent of Responding Schools with that Type of Course that Provided 
Data:

Figures:

Figure 1: Prevalence of Types of Programs at Community Colleges and 
Technical Schools in the Fall Term of 2002:

Figure 2: Median Percentage of Students Enrolled in Seven Programs in 
the Fall Term of 2002 at 758 Schools Completing GAO Survey:

Figure 3: Percentage of Students Enrolled in Four Types of Credit and 
Noncredit Programs:

Figure 4: Percentage of Contracts Reported by Surveyed Schools 
According to Employer Type in the 2002-03 Academic Year:

Figure 5: Percentages of Schools' Contracts with Employers by Total 
Number of Employees:

Figure 6: Share of Revenues for Public Community Colleges:

Figure 7: Comparison of State Funding Received by Schools for Credit 
and Basic Skills Courses:

Figure 8: Comparison of State Funding Received by Schools for Credit 
and Noncredit Occupational, Professional, and Technical Training 
Courses:

Figure 9: Degree to Which Schools Received State Funding for Contract 
Training:

Figure 10: Comparison of Median Funding Per School and Percentage of 
Schools Reporting Funds, by Federal Program:

Abbreviations:

ABE: Adult Basic Education: 
AEFLA: Adult Education and Family Literacy Act: 
ESL: English as a Second Language: 
GED: General Educational Development: 
HEA: Higher Education Act: 
IPEDS: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System: 
NCCET: National Council for Continuing Education and Training: 
NCES: National Center for Education Statistics: 
NSF: National Science Foundation: 
TANF: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: 
VR: vocational rehabilitation: 
WIA: Workforce Investment Act:

United States Government Accountability Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

October 18, 2004:

The Honorable Judd Gregg: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: 
United States Senate:

Dear Mr. Chairman:

In future years, higher levels of education and training will continue 
to provide one of the best opportunities for the nearly 36 million 
Americans living in poverty[Footnote 1] to achieve economic well-being 
and for others who need additional skills to retain or improve their 
employment status. Accessing these opportunities will be key for these 
groups to compete for 21 million new jobs that the Department of Labor 
projects will be created during the 2002 to 2012 period.[Footnote 2] 
The nation's more than 1,100 public community colleges and technical 
schools are often a resource to which job seekers or those currently 
employed turn for help in this regard. Each year, these schools educate 
nearly half of American undergraduate students and provide training for 
millions of students seeking to upgrade their job skills. Nearly 6 
million students were enrolled in for-credit courses in the fall term 
of 2000 and millions more participated in noncredit courses.

While these schools have often been viewed as mainly providing courses 
offering college credit for academic or occupational credentials, the 
educational landscape in which they operate includes a variety of 
noncredit programs as well, as shown in table 1. For example, a school 
might provide training in English as a Second Language to help give 
immigrants this basic skill for the job market, or it might create 
training for a specific company.

Table 1: Overview of Basic Types of Credit and Noncredit Programs:

Type of program: College credit programs: Academic degree or transfer; 
Description: Courses leading to an Associate of Arts, Associate of 
Science, or other academic degree or eligible for transfer credit to an 
institution that offers baccalaureate degrees.

Type of program: College credit programs: Occupational, professional, 
or technical training; 
Description: Courses leading to an Associate of Applied Science or 
other occupationally related degree, certificate, license, or diploma 
(e.g., dental assistant certificate).

Type of program: Noncredit courses or programs: Occupational, 
professional, or technical training; 
Description: Noncredit courses leading to a certificate, license, or 
diploma (e.g., noncredit certified nursing assistant program.

Type of program: Noncredit courses or programs: Below college-level 
academics (remedial); 
Description: Courses, including mathematics, English, and reading that 
are required before students who lack college-level proficiency in 
those subjects can be accepted in a college-level program.

Type of program: Noncredit courses or programs: Basic skills; 
Description: Courses, including Adult Basic Education, English as a 
Second Language, and those preparing students for the General 
Educational Development examination.

Type of program: Noncredit courses or programs: Contract training; 
Description: Employee training provided under contract to businesses, 
government entities, or other employers.

Type of program: Noncredit courses or programs: Other; 
Description: Includes personal enrichment courses and any other courses 
not in the above categories. 

Source: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004.

[End of table]

Little is known about the full spectrum of credit and noncredit 
academic and training programs established at community colleges and 
technical schools. At your request, we conducted a study to determine: 
(1) the extent to which community colleges and technical schools are 
involved in remedial education and workforce training efforts as well 
as academic preparation activities; (2) how state and federal funding 
support these academic and training efforts; and (3) what is known 
about schools' efforts to measure outcomes, including the rates at 
which students graduate, transfer to 4-year institutions, pass 
occupational licensing exams, and gain employment.

Our answers are based in part on a Web-based survey we conducted of 
public community colleges and technical schools nationwide. Survey data 
for all programs, except contract training, was for the fall term of 
2002. (We did not include proprietary schools, such as for-profit 
technical schools, in our survey population.) We activated the survey 
Web site, notified the 1,070 public community colleges and technical 
schools in our survey population, and received responses from 758 
community colleges and technical schools (71 percent).[Footnote 3] We 
checked the survey responses for obvious errors and problems, but did 
not independently verify the accuracy of the information these schools 
provided. We also obtained and relied on data from the National Center 
for Education Statistics' (NCES) Integrated Postsecondary Education 
Data System (IPEDS) to identify our study population. We assessed the 
reliability of the IPEDS data, reviewing NCES's methods for testing the 
internal consistency of data reported by schools. We supplemented our 
survey data with visits to community college and state officials in 
three states--Florida, Texas, and Washington--and interviewed 
officials in a fourth state, North Carolina, by telephone.[Footnote 4] 
Using the recommendations of education and workforce experts at 
community colleges and professional organizations, we chose these 
states because they differed in such ways as the extent of state 
funding for credit and noncredit courses, the tracking of student 
education and employment outcomes, the types of workforce development 
efforts, and geographic location. We examined two or more schools in 
each state, except for Texas where we only visited one school, 
selecting them on the basis of expert recommendations to obtain a mix 
based on differences in level of student enrollment and urban and rural 
locale. We also relied on the findings of national outcomes studies 
regarded to be authoritative by researchers and other experts in the 
field. We reviewed these studies to assess the validity of their 
findings and found them to be valid. We conducted our study from May 
2003 through August 2004 in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

Our survey results indicate that the majority of community colleges and 
technical schools are offering a broad spectrum of academic and 
training programs--everything from traditional courses for degree-
seeking students to remedial education and specialized training 
customized for business clients. While the education and training 
options are many, the primary focus of schools and students remains 
academic credit programs that may lead to a degree, credential, or 
transfer to a 4-year institution. Noncredit training is substantial at 
some schools, however, and while some of these programs are less well 
known, they provide some advantages to the colleges, students, and 
employers alike. In particular, more than three-fourths of schools were 
involved in contract training--providing existing or customized 
programs to give incumbent workers new or upgraded skills. One 
community college in Florida, for example, annually contracts with 300 
companies to train about 5,000 employees. Aside from training under 
specific contracts, 61 percent of schools responding to our survey 
report offering noncredit occupational, professional, or technical 
training. A community college in Texas, for example, offers a series of 
courses that, while not providing college credit, leads to a 
certificate in the medical coding system that hospitals use to obtain 
reimbursements from the government and insurers. Offering such training 
on a noncredit basis allows schools to use shorter training periods and 
more quickly add or delete courses to meet local training needs. 
Regardless of whether programs were credit or noncredit, schools most 
frequently offered occupational, professional, or technical training 
programs in three fields projected by the Department of Labor to have 
high growth in future years--health care, business, and information 
technology.

States historically have provided the greatest share of funding for 
public community colleges, while federal funding has been comparatively 
much smaller. On average, Department of Education data show that 
between 1992-93 and 2000-01, states provided between 40 and 45 percent 
of schools' total revenue--about twice as much as provided by local 
taxes and student tuition and fees, respectively. Federal funding, 
exclusive of student financial assistance, provided about 5 percent. On 
a program-by-program basis, state funding varied considerably between 
credit and noncredit programs. While about one-third of schools 
responding to our survey reported receiving about the same level of 
state funding for credit and noncredit occupational, professional, and 
technical training programs, most states fund noncredit courses to a 
lesser degree--and in some cases not at all. Similarly, schools 
reported large differences in amounts received under each of nine 
different federal programs. Most schools received federal funding--a 
median of about $300,000--from the Perkins Vocational Education 
program. Overall, seven of the nine programs each provided a median of 
under $200,000 to the one-third or less of colleges and schools 
reporting such data.

Most community colleges and technical schools reported tracking some 
education and employment outcomes for their students, but differences 
in state reporting requirements preclude aggregating these performance 
data to report on the proportion of students nationwide that graduate, 
transfer to 4-year institutions, pass licensing examinations, or gain 
employment. In addition, while the Department of Education collects 
graduation and completion rates for full-time, degree-seeking students 
at most schools, most community college students do not meet this 
definition and are not included. Graduation data reported by one 
community college in Washington State, for example, represented 20 
percent of students who entered school in the fall term. The best 
national outcome data are from studies of representative samples or 
cohorts of students conducted by the National Center for Education 
Statistics. Two of these studies indicate that between half and two-
thirds of community college students seeking some type of academic or 
occupational credential succeed in transferring to a 4-year institution 
or earning a degree, license, certificate, or diploma within 6 to 8 
years of initiating studies. For community college students enrolled in 
remedial academic courses, our survey results mirrored those reported 
by NCES in 1995--a median of about two-thirds of students successfully 
completed such courses. Our survey also indicated that a median of 
60 percent or more of students enrolled in General Educational 
Development or other Adult Basic Education courses completed them 
successfully.

Background:

Since the first public 2-year college opened more than 100 years ago, 
community colleges have experienced considerable change in their 
purpose and mission. They have expanded beyond their original academic 
or vocational focus to meet a wide variety of educational, economic, 
and social needs. Community colleges have kept their "transfer 
function," preparing students for 4-year institutions, while assuming a 
role in occupational skills training and adult basic education. With 
open admissions and low tuition policies, community colleges serve the 
needs of a diverse student body, ranging from people without any type 
of educational credential to those with advanced academic degrees. 
Between 1980 and 2000, the number of community colleges grew about 14 
percent with enrollments increasing about 32 percent;[Footnote 5] 
enrollments are projected to increase about 14 percent from 2001 to 
2013.[Footnote 6] According to data compiled by NCES, community college 
students are more likely than 4-year college students to be 24 years of 
age or older, not enroll directly after high school, attend part-time 
and work full-time while enrolled, be financially independent for 
federal financial aid purposes, have dependents, be a single parent, or 
not have a high school diploma.

Community colleges and technical schools have a wide variety of program 
types from which to draw. The programs include traditional academic 
courses for students intending to obtain an associate degree or 
transfer to a baccalaureate-granting institution as well as remedial 
education to bring students to college-level proficiency and basic 
skills training for people who want to improve their employability or 
pass the General Educational Development examination. Separate from 
these program types, other programs offer credit and noncredit 
occupational, professional, and technical training leading to degrees, 
certificates, licenses, or diplomas for new and existing workers; 
training developed for specific employers; and other programs to meet 
the personal and professional interests of the local community. Such 
training can range from a 2-year program that prepares students to take 
a certification test to single, short-term introductory courses in a 
subject such as introduction to the Internet.

Community Colleges and Technical Schools Have Expanded Roles in 
Educating and Training the Nation's Workforce:

Community colleges and technical schools offered a mix of credit and 
noncredit education and training programs that served to help students 
transition from high schools to postsecondary institutions, prepare 
people for college-level learning, and provide new and existing workers 
with new or upgraded job skills. While the education and training 
options are many, the primary focus of schools and students remains 
academic credit programs that may lead to a degree, credential, or 
transfer to a 4-year institution. Noncredit training is substantial at 
some schools, however, and most colleges and schools offer contract 
training that can be customized for employers seeking new or upgraded 
skills for their employees.

Most Colleges and Schools Offer a Mix of Credit and Noncredit Academic 
and Training Programs:

The majority of community colleges and technical schools responding to 
our survey reported offering a wide range of academic and training 
programs in addition to their college credit curriculum. Nearly all 
schools reported offering two types of credit programs--those that lead 
either to a 2-year degree or transfer to a baccalaureate-granting 
institution (93 percent), and those that lead to an occupational, 
professional, or technical credential (96 percent). Each of the four 
types of noncredit programs was offered by at least 61 percent of the 
schools that responded to our survey. These programs provided skill 
proficiency ranging from better academic preparation to training that 
leads to an occupational license or certificate (see fig. 1).

Figure 1: Prevalence of Types of Programs at Community Colleges and 
Technical Schools in the Fall Term of 2002:

[See PDF for image]

[A] Contract training data are for the 2002-03 academic year.

[End of figure]

Some officials we talked with during site visits indicated that states 
and colleges consider occupation projections when establishing training 
programs. Two states we visited had strategies to help guide schools in 
establishing programs that address the needs of local businesses and 
the workforce. Florida, for example, created a targeted occupations 
list to guide program offerings at community colleges. Colleges may 
offer programs from the list without obtaining special permission or 
review from the state. In Washington State, community college officials 
said that colleges proposing new professional or technical programs 
must show that the estimated output of the proposed program along with 
similar programs statewide does not exceed the projected employment 
need. Our survey data show many schools offer programs in occupations 
with projected growth. Schools reported that the most frequently 
offered fields of study, whether offered for credit or noncredit, were 
in the areas of health, business, and computer/information 
technology.[Footnote 7] According to Department of Labor projections, 
these three fields should experience high growth in employment.

Credit Programs Remain a Major Focus for Most Schools and Students:

Credit programs were the most likely programs to be offered by the 758 
community colleges and technical schools that responded to our survey 
and they were also the program areas with the greatest median number of 
enrolled students. While students were often enrolled in more than one 
type of program,[Footnote 8] the median percent of students enrolled in 
academic credit programs was 49 percent, and the median percent of 
students enrolled in occupational, professional, or technical training 
programs for credit was 33 percent. The median percent of students 
enrolled in five noncredit programs ranged from 1 to 14 percent. (See 
fig. 2.)

Figure 2: Median Percentage of Students Enrolled in Seven Programs in 
the Fall Term of 2002 at 758 Schools Completing GAO Survey:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Most community colleges and technical schools made their credit 
curriculums available to high school students through transition 
programs that link secondary and postsecondary academic and vocational 
education. Among schools responding to our survey almost all community 
colleges and technical schools were involved in at least one of three 
such programs:

* Over 90 percent of schools participated in dual or concurrent 
enrollment programs that allowed high school students to attend 
college-level classes and earn both high school and college credit.

* Nearly 75 percent of schools had "Tech-Prep" programs[Footnote 9] 
that consist of 2 years of high school and 2 years of higher education 
or an apprenticeship program leading to a credential in specific career 
fields such as welding or accounting.

* Slightly less than half of schools participated in school-to-career 
programs that link the high school with the business community to 
improve student transitions to work.[Footnote 10]

At the schools we visited, the demand for these programs could be seen 
in the size of the enrollments. Concurrent enrollment at one community 
college in Texas, for example, included more than 1,400 high school 
students in spring 2002 and was expected to exceed 1,800 the next fall. 
These students could earn up to 1 year of college credit prior to high 
school graduation. A community college in Washington State with a total 
headcount enrollment of 39,020 was serving 816 high school students 
under a dual credit program in the 2002-03 academic year.

Noncredit Programs Enroll Substantial Numbers of Students at Some 
Schools:

While schools reported higher student enrollment in credit courses 
overall, at some schools large proportions of students were enrolled in 
noncredit programs. Figure 3 shows the relative number of students 
enrolled in four types of credit and noncredit programs in the fall 
term of 2002, as reported by the surveyed schools.

Figure 3: Percentage of Students Enrolled in Four Types of Credit and 
Noncredit Programs:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Noncredit programs offer various benefits to schools and employers. 
School administrators have found that noncredit courses allow them to 
address shifts in local labor markets, often in a short time. They can 
develop and deliver noncredit courses more quickly than credit courses 
because noncredit courses have a less complicated review and approval 
process. Schools may use noncredit courses as a transition to adding or 
deleting programs from the curriculum. In Florida, for example, a 
community college official said the college collaborated with a local 
hospital to develop a course for interpretive services that train 
intermediaries to work between English speaking staff and foreign 
language patients. The college started the course as noncredit with the 
view of later converting the course to credit if interest and 
enrollment grew. In contrast, declining numbers of students in a real 
estate program led the college to change it from credit to noncredit.

Benefits to students enrolled in noncredit programs often include low 
or no tuition and fees, simpler enrollment procedures, less formal 
classroom settings, and more flexible class schedules. Noncredit 
education helps students wanting to upgrade skills, retrain for a new 
career, prepare for a licensing exam, or pursue vocational interests. 
An administrator at a North Carolina community college noted that many 
noncredit courses are intended for students who do not want or need a 
degree--or another degree. For some people, completion of a few short-
term noncredit courses serves as a transition to the credit academic or 
occupational pathway that leads to a degree or certificate.

Perhaps one of the biggest benefits of noncredit programs is to provide 
transitional education for people who leave high school unprepared for 
college-level programs. Community colleges, with their open admissions 
policies, are a prime source of instruction for the great number of 
students needing remediation. Overall, more than a dozen states 
estimated that half of students entering community colleges required 
some type of remedial education, according to a state survey conducted 
by the Education Commission of the States in 2001.[Footnote 11] The 
remaining 14 states providing such data estimated the proportion of 
entering students needing remediation ranged from a low of 10 to a high 
of 49 percent. States report continuing demand for remedial education. 
Washington State, for example, reported in 2004 that about half of 
students entering community colleges and technical schools within 3 
years of high school take at least one remedial course, most often in 
math.

Schools Offer Contract Training That Can Be Customized for Employers 
Seeking New or Upgraded Skills for Employees:

One other type of noncredit program--contract training--is treated 
separately here because many colleges administer their contract 
training separately from other college programs, and less may be known 
about it. Contract training programs typically offer flexibility and 
responsiveness in meeting the needs and schedules of trainees and their 
employers. In consultation with the business or organization, the 
school may provide an existing or specially created course, hold the 
training at the worksite or on campus, and use existing faculty or hire 
instructors. Training may focus on management, computer, language, 
customer service, or any other subject that an employer considers 
important to improving its workforce.

More than three-quarters of schools responding to our survey offered 
contract training in the 2002-03 academic year. Schools responding to 
our survey reported serving a total of over 1 million trainees through 
contract training during the 2002-03 academic year, with a median of 
982 trainees per school. More than half of the reported contracts were 
with private companies, but schools also contracted with government and 
nonprofit agencies. (See fig. 4.)

Figure 4: Percentage of Contracts Reported by Surveyed Schools 
According to Employer Type in the 2002-03 Academic Year:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Computed only for schools providing data on employer type.

[End of figure]

Contract training was provided to employers with 100 or fewer employees 
about one-quarter of the time. (See fig. 5.) A workforce development 
expert we spoke with said that larger employers are more likely to 
provide the minimum class size that community colleges need to make 
customized training financially viable.

Figure 5: Percentages of Schools' Contracts with Employers by Total 
Number of Employees:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Computed only for schools providing data on employer size.

[End of figure]

Community colleges and technical schools have pursued contract training 
for such reasons as the following: to meet the training needs of local 
employers, to cultivate potential employers for their students, and to 
develop an additional revenue source. However, contract training 
presents an entrepreneurial challenge to community colleges and 
technical schools since employers are free to choose other training 
sources, including in-house instructors, private contractors or 
consultants, 4-year colleges, or other community colleges. This 
competition provides an incentive for community colleges to develop 
networks among local employers and market their training services. For 
example, a community college administrator in Florida stressed the 
importance of partnerships with local businesses and chambers of 
commerce in identifying potential clients.

State Funding to Schools Dominated but Varied by Type of Program; 
Federal Funding Provided a Much Smaller Share:

States have historically contributed the largest share of funding for 
public community colleges compared with other public and private 
funding sources. State funding policies generally differ among 
programs, however, in that states often provide less funding to support 
schools' noncredit education and training programs. Overall the share 
of federal funding to public community colleges has been stable, but 
comparatively small. The level of federal funding each school receives 
generally depends on participation in a number of grant programs and 
may flow directly to schools or indirectly through grants to states or 
other entities.

States Are the Largest Funding Source, but Many Schools Reported 
Receiving Less State Funding for Some Types of Noncredit Courses:

State funding has been a major source of revenue for public community 
colleges for years. Data collected by the National Center for Education 
Statistics show that the share of their revenue from state governments 
has remained relatively stable between 40 and 45 percent of all revenue 
from 1992-93 through 2000-01, the latest year that published NCES data 
are available. As figure 6 shows, states provide about double the 
amounts received from student tuition and fees and local governments, 
which are the next two largest revenue sources.

Figure 6: Share of Revenues for Public Community Colleges:

[See PDF for image]

[A] Published data unavailable for 1997-98 and 1998-99.

[End of figure]

Every public community college system in the country receives some 
level of state support. Survey results reported by the Education 
Commission of the States in 2000 showed that 29 states used funding 
formulas[Footnote 12] to determine the amount to be appropriated for 
community colleges as a whole, the amount to be distributed to each 
college, or both. The primary elements used in the state formulas were 
enrollment, space utilization, and comparison with peer institutions.

Community colleges receive less funding for noncredit academic and 
occupational training programs than for credit programs for two main 
reasons. First, less than half of all states, according to national 
surveys conducted by the Education Commission of the States[Footnote 
13] and the National Council for Continuing Education and 
Training,[Footnote 14] fund noncredit programs at community colleges. 
Second, most of those states that do provide funding for noncredit 
programs based on numbers of full-time equivalent students provide 
funding at a lower rate-generally 50 to 75 percent of the rate provided 
for credit programs. Our survey responses indicated that states often 
provided lower levels of funding for courses offered without college 
credit in three areas--basic skills; noncredit occupational, 
professional, and technical training; and contract training.

Basic Skills:

Nearly 40 percent of schools responding to our survey reported 
receiving less state funding for basic skills courses (Adult Basic 
Education, English as a Second Language, and General Educational 
Development) compared with funding received for credit courses (see 
fig. 7). A somewhat lower percentage of schools reported receiving 
about the same or higher level of state funding for these courses.

Figure 7: Comparison of State Funding Received by Schools for Credit 
and Basic Skills Courses:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Schools often rely heavily on state and federal funding sources to 
support their basic skills programs, as these developmental courses are 
often offered at little or no cost to students in order to increase 
accessibility to all populations. However, increased demand for such 
services has created challenges for schools in states such as Texas, 
where state funding for adult education and literacy has been 
insufficient to meet current and growing demand for these services, 
according to a 2003 state [Footnote 15]report.:

Noncredit Occupational, Professional, and Technical Training:

Nearly two-thirds of community colleges and technical schools 
responding to our survey reported receiving state funds for noncredit 
occupational, professional, or technical training courses, while nearly 
one-fifth reported that they were not permitted to use state funds to 
support these training courses. As shown in figure 8, of the schools 
that did receive direct state funding, over half reported receiving 
lesser amounts for these noncredit training courses than courses 
offered for credit. About one-third of schools received the same level 
of state support for credit and noncredit occupational programs.

Figure 8: Comparison of State Funding Received by Schools for Credit 
and Noncredit Occupational, Professional, and Technical Training 
Courses:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Lower levels of state funding for noncredit training courses provided 
both challenges and benefits to schools, according to college 
officials. An official from the North Carolina Community College System 
said that because the state funds noncredit occupational programs at 75 
percent of credit programs, schools face challenges in operating 
training programs in areas (such as biotechnology) that have high 
demand among local employers but also higher operating costs in terms 
of teacher salaries and equ[Footnote 16]ipment. On the other hand, a 
representative from a community college in North Carolina said that 
lower state funding for noncredit programs encouraged the school to 
charge tuition at a level that would make the program self-supporting, 
providing an additional revenue stream as schools in this state are 
allowed to keep tuition received instead of returning it to the state.

Contract Training:

Nearly two-thirds of community colleges and technical schools 
responding to our survey reported receiving state funds to defray costs 
of delivering employee training under contract to businesses, 
government entities, or other employers, as shown in figure 9. For the 
majority of schools (54 percent), the state funded only a portion 
(about half or less) of their contract training costs, while a few (11 
percent) received state funds covering all or most of their costs in 
providing contract services to customers.

Figure 9: Degree to Which Schools Received State Funding for Contract 
Training:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

States we visited funded contract training at community colleges 
differently from their other academic and training programs. Some 
states had established separate grant programs for this purpose. 
Florida, for example, funds contract training primarily through two 
state grant programs. The first of these--the Quick Response Training 
Program--is designed to retain and attract businesses creating new 
high-quality jobs. A representative from one Florida community college 
said that the college used a Quick Response Training grant to prepare a 
labor pool as an incentive for DHL, an express shipping company, to 
relocate to the county. The second program--the Incumbent Worker 
Training Program--is targeted to maintain the competitiveness of 
existing businesses by upgrading employee skills. Since their inception 
in 1993 and 1999, respectively, these programs have funded training for 
over 100,000 employees across the state.

In North Carolina, the state funds contract training at community 
colleges for companies creating 12 or more new jobs in a 1-year period 
through the New and Expanding Industry Training Program, first 
established in 1958. During fiscal year 2001-02, this state-funded 
program served nearly 15,000 trainees. In addition, the state's Focused 
Industrial Training program allows industries related to manufacturing, 
computers, and telecommunications to upgrade employees' technological 
skills. State funding under this program allowed community colleges 
throughout the state to train more than 10,000 employees of over 750 
companies during fiscal year 2001-02.

Federal Funding Is Comparatively Small and Comes from Many Programs:

The federal share of public community college funding has been fairly 
stable over time, but relatively small compared with other funding 
sources. Excluding federal student financial aid, federal funding 
provided about 5 percent of total public community college revenue 
between 1992-93 and 2000-01 as previously shown in figure 6.[Footnote 
17] These revenues are provided through a number of federal programs 
operated by various agencies, including the Departments of Education 
and Labor. However, information on the extent that community colleges 
receive federal funds through each of these programs is limited at the 
federal level. While some funds-such as those available under Title III 
of the Higher Education Act---are provided directly from federal 
agencies to schools, other funds--such as those under the Workforce 
Investment Act--are provided to states that subsequently determine 
whether community colleges or other entities will receive funding. 
There are no clear federal requirements to report this information back 
to the federal agency--the Department of Labor--distributing these 
state-based grants.

We surveyed community colleges and technical schools to determine the 
level of federal support through each of nine different 
programs.[Footnote 18] Our results, however, are not comprehensive 
because only 71 percent of schools responded to our survey, and of 
those schools--between 22 and 41 percent of respondents--did not 
provide data for individual federal funding sources. What our survey 
results did show was that these nine programs provided a minimum of 
nearly $700 million, or about 4 percent of total revenues, to the 
schools that reported receiving funds. As shown in table 2, less than 
30 percent of federal funds from these 9 programs were provided 
directly to community colleges; the rest was provided indirectly 
through the states. Community colleges and technical schools that 
responded to our survey, on average, each received funds from three of 
these nine federal sources.

Table 2: Funding Received by Community Colleges and Technical Schools 
under Nine Federal Programs as Reported by Survey Respondents for 
Fiscal Year 2003.

Dollars in millions.

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Perkins 
Vocational Education Program (Vocational Education); 
Purpose: Reauthorized in 1998, provides assistance for secondary and 
postsecondary vocational education (mostly less-than-4-year 
postsecondary institutions); 
Total federal program funding: $1,329; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $205.9; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 78%.

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Workforce 
Investment Act (WIA) - Title II Program (Adult Education and Family 
Literacy Act - AEFLA); 
Purpose: Part of the WIA of 1998, supports adult basic skill programs, 
high school completion programs, and programs that enable adults to 
become more employable, productive, and responsible; 
Total federal program funding: $569; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $77.8; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 66%.

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Temporary 
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Program; 
Purpose: Enacted in 1996, provides grants to states for assistance to 
needy families. At state option, assistance can be used for training 
programs to help recipients move from welfare to work; 
Total federal program funding: $16,488; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $63.0; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 63%.

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Dislocated 
Worker Activities under Workforce Investment Act (WIA) - Title I; 
Purpose: Established in 1998, provides training to individuals who have 
lost their jobs and are unlikely to return to those jobs or similar 
jobs in the same industry; 
Total federal program funding: $1,501; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $54.7[B]; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 64%[B].

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Vocational 
Rehabilitation (VR) Program; 
Purpose: Enacted in 1973, provides grants to states for comprehensive 
vocational rehabilitation services to help persons with physical and 
mental disabilities become employable and achieve full integration into 
society; 
Total federal program funding: $2,533; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $34.3; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 61%.

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Youth 
Activities under Workforce Investment Act (WIA) - Title I; 
Purpose: Enacted in 1998, provides training to low-income youth age 
14- 21; 
Total federal program funding: $995; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $30.4[B]; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 61%[B].

Program funds provided indirectly through states (72%): Adult 
Activities under Workforce Investment Act (WIA) - Title I; 
Purpose: Enacted in 1998, provides training to individuals age 18 and 
older; 
Total federal program funding: $895; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $24.1[B]; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 59%[B].

Program funds provided directly to schools (28%): Higher Education Act 
(HEA)-Title III Program (Aid for Institutional Development); 
Purpose: First enacted in 1965, provides grants to higher education 
institutions to strengthen academic quality, institutional management, 
and financial stability; 
Total federal program funding: $389; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $168.7; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 63%.

Program funds provided directly to schools (28%): National Science 
Foundation (NSF) Research Grant Program; 
Purpose: Created in 1950, NSF supports science and engineering in 
general and funds basic research across many disciplines, mostly at 
U.S. colleges and universities; 
Total federal program funding: $903; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $25.5; 
Percentage of all colleges and schools responding to survey that 
reported amount of program funding[A]: 63%.

Total; 
Total federal program funding: $25,602; 
Funding received by all community colleges and technical schools 
responding to survey: $684.4. 

Sources: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004, 
and Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2005, Appendix.

[A] Total number of schools responding to our overall survey was 758 
out of 1,070 public community colleges and technical schools, including 
schools that reported receiving $0 program funds.

[B] Amounts received under the WIA dislocated worker program, youth 
program, and adult program are likely to be understated because only 30 
percent, 18 percent, and 18 percent of the survey respondents, 
respectively, reported funding above $0, while the percent of schools 
reporting participation in these programs was about 2, 1.5, and 3.4 
times higher, respectively. Between 83 and 86 percent of survey 
respondents provided data on participation in the three WIA programs.

[End of table]

Community colleges and technical schools reported considerable 
differences in the amounts received under each of the nine different 
federal programs. Colleges and schools reported receiving the least 
amount of median funding from the Vocational Rehabilitation program 
(median of about $40,000) and the most median funding from programs 
under Title III of the Higher Education Act (median of over $350,000). 
Overall, seven of the nine programs provided a median of under $200,000 
to the one-third or less of colleges and schools responding to our 
survey that reported receiving revenue from these programs.

Figure 10: Comparison of Median Funding Per School and Percentage of 
Schools Reporting Funds, by Federal Program:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Differences in Community College and Technical School and State Data 
Collection Efforts Place Reliance on National Studies for Measuring 
Overall Student Outcomes:

Most community colleges and technical schools responding to our survey 
have systems in place to measure education and employment outcomes for 
students enrolled in at least some programs, but differences in how 
these schools and states measure and report such data preclude using 
them to report nationally on the proportion of community college and 
technical school students who graduate, transfer to 4-year 
institutions, pass licensing examinations, or gain employment. 
Likewise, while several federal programs each have a methodology to 
collect outcomes such as graduation rates from schools, this 
methodology is often applied to relatively few students and, therefore, 
the results may not represent outcomes for students nationwide. The 
best national outcome data, which stem from studies conducted by the 
National Center for Education Statistics, show that between half and 
two-thirds of community college students seeking an academic credential 
were successful in doing so or in transferring to a 4-year institution 
within 6 to 8 years of enrolling in community college programs.

Community Colleges and Technical Schools and States Differ in Measuring 
and Reporting Education and Employment Outcomes:

Almost all community colleges and technical schools responding to our 
survey developed some type of student education or employment outcome 
measures for their students, but they most frequently collected such 
data for students enrolled in for-credit academic and occupational, 
professional, or technical training programs. For example, as shown in 
table 3, over half of community college and technical schools 
responding to our survey tracked both education and employment outcomes 
for both types of for-credit programs, but only about a sixth of 
community colleges and technical schools tracked these data for 
noncredit occupational, professional, or technical training programs.

Table 3: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools Tracking 
Education or Employment Outcomes for Three Types of Programs for All 
Students or a Representative Sample in 2002-03:

Type of program completed: For-credit academic[A]; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Both education and employment: 52; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Education only: 20; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Employment only: 10; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Neither education nor employment: 12.

Type of program completed: For-credit occupational, professional, or 
technical training; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Both education and employment: 59; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Education only: 11; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Employment only: 17; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Neither education nor employment: 8.

Type of program completed: Noncredit occupational, professional, or 
technical training; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Both education and employment: 17; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Education only: 13; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Employment only: 7; 
Types of outcomes tracked: Neither education nor employment: 49. 

Source: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004.

Note: Rows do not add to 100 percent because some schools did not 
respond to the survey question or said they did not know the answer.

[A] Programs completed by students who earned an academic degree (e.g., 
Associate of Arts or Associate of Science) or transferred to an 
institution that offers baccalaureate degrees.

[End of table]

To some extent, the difference in community colleges' and technical 
schools' data collection for credit and noncredit programs reflects the 
extent to which such data are needed to meet federal and state 
reporting requirements. For example, a community college official in 
Oregon said that his community college collects and reports student 
completion and graduation rates for credit courses to meet eligibility 
requirements for participation in federal student aid programs, but the 
school is less likely to collect such information for noncredit 
courses. In the absence of specific federal requirements to collect and 
report outcome data, some states have developed outcome measures for 
noncredit programs, but these outcome measures may differ from those 
used to measure credit programs. Community college officials from North 
Carolina, for example, said that most student outcome measures, 
including those required by the state, are focused on credit courses, 
and the success of noncredit programs is measured by conducting 
satisfaction surveys of businesses whose employees have attended 
classes.

While less than half of community colleges and technical schools 
measured outcomes for noncredit occupational, professional, or 
technical training programs, they were much more likely to measure 
outcomes for students enrolled in noncredit remedial courses (such as 
mathematics, English, or reading) or basic skills courses (such as 
English as a Second Language). As table 4 shows, community colleges and 
technical schools were more likely to report education outcomes for 
students, such as enrollment in college-level programs and degree 
attainment, than outcomes related to employment and wages.

Table 4: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools Tracking 
Four Types of Outcomes for Students Who Completed below College-Level 
(Remedial) and Basic Skills Courses and Percent of Responding Schools 
That Provided Data:

Type of student: Below college-level (remedial); 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Enrollment in college-level programs: 65/96; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Degree attainment: 37/91; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Employment status: 10/88; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Wages: 6/87.

Type of student: Basic skills; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Enrollment in college-level programs: 56/90; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Degree attainment: 27/85; 
Type of outcomes tracked/ percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Employment status: 30/87; 
Type of outcomes tracked/percent of responding schools that provided 
data: Wages: 7/83.

[End of table]

Source: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004.

Community colleges and technical schools used several different methods 
to collect education and employment data for students who had been 
enrolled in academic and occupational, professional, or technical 
training programs but, as table 5 shows, relied most heavily on student 
self-reported data obtained through follow-up surveys for each type of 
program. Many community colleges and technical schools supplemented 
this data source for education and employment outcomes by obtaining 
data from institutions students had transferred to and, to a much 
lesser extent, tracking unemployment insurance wage data.

Table 5: Percent of Community Colleges and Technical Schools That Used 
Each of Three Methods to Track Outcomes for Students Who Completed 
Three Types of Programs:

Type of program completed: For-credit academic; 
Tracking mechanism: School conducted student follow-up surveys: 72; 
Tracking mechanism: School tracked unemployment insurance wage data: 
14; 
Tracking mechanism: School collected data from educational institutions 
on students who had transferred: 54.

Type of program completed: For-credit occupational, professional, or
technical training; 
Tracking mechanism: School conducted student follow-up surveys: 80; 
Tracking mechanism: School tracked unemployment insurance wage data: 
18; 
Tracking mechanism: School collected data from educational institutions 
on students who had transferred: 45.

Type of program completed: Noncredit occupational, professional, or 
technical training[A]; 
Tracking mechanism: School conducted student follow-up surveys: 34; 
Tracking mechanism: School tracked unemployment insurance wage data: 7; 
Tracking mechanism: School collected data from educational institutions 
on students who had transferred: 4. 

Source: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004.

Note: Rows do not add to 100 percent because schools may be using more 
than one tracking mechanism.

[A] Between 86 and 88 percent of survey respondents provided data for 
noncredit occupational, professional, or technical training programs.

[End of table]

While many community colleges and technical schools reported measuring 
both education and employment outcomes through student surveys, one 
study showed that the specific performance measures that individual 
states require their schools to report on differed substantially from 
each other.[Footnote 19] The Education Commission of the States 
reported in November 2000 that 27 states required community colleges to 
report on performance measures and indicated that each state required 
schools to use a different set of measures. While 19 states had no 
performance measures in use or under development, others used more than 
30. The most common performance measures (rates for graduation, 
certificates and degrees awarded, transfer to 4-year institutions, and 
job placement) were required in only 16 or 17 states.

While methodological differences preclude aggregating performance data 
for national use, 6 states we visited or contacted required community 
colleges to report on specific performance measures. The Texas Higher 
Education Coordinating Board, for example, collected information on 
student pass rates from agencies and professional organizations 
responsible for administering 45 licensure/certification examinations, 
including aircraft mechanic, court reporter, and nuclear medicine 
technician.[Footnote 20] These licensing examination pass rates were 
used as part of the Board's overall assessment of the effectiveness of 
vocational education programs at community and technical colleges in 
the state. Similarly, for 15 years the North Carolina Community College 
System has annually published school performance measures for purposes 
of accountability and performance funding and for use in evaluating the 
College System's strategic plan.[Footnote 21] In February 1999, the 
North Carolina Board of Community Colleges adopted 12 performance 
measures for accountability, including pass rates on licensure and 
certification examinations, employment status of graduates, pass rates 
of students in developmental courses, as well as employer satisfaction 
with graduates.

Data Collected under Federal Programs Are Not Representative of 
Outcomes for All Students and Schools:

The federal government has some reporting requirements for measuring 
education and employment outcomes across schools and states, but these 
requirements sometimes pertain only to participants in a federal 
program and results may not be nationally representative of all 
community college students and schools. For example:

* Postsecondary institutions eligible for federal student aid are 
required to disclose completion or graduation rates and transfer rates 
of first-time, certificate-or degree-seeking, full-time students who 
begin their studies in the fall term. These data are collected annually 
by the National Center for Education Statistics through its Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. Outcome data from community 
colleges and technical schools that do participate in this annual 
survey are not representative of student outcomes as a whole because 
most students do not fall under the reporting requirement. For example, 
in the 1999-2000 school year, only about a third of community college 
and technical school students attended school full-time.[Footnote 22] A 
community college in Washington, for example, estimated that less than 
20 percent of students who entered school in fall, 1996, were included 
in the IPEDS reporting requirements.

* The Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Technical Education Act provide 
grants to states to help provide vocational-technical education 
programs and services to youths and adults at the secondary and 
postsecondary level. Under the Perkins Act, states are required to 
develop measures of student performance such as competency attainment, 
job or work-skill attainment, and retention in school or placement in a 
school, job, or the military. Our survey showed that less than three-
fourths of community colleges and technical schools reported receiving 
vocational education funds and would, therefore, be required to report 
such outcomes. Further, while several states have created data links 
between unemployment insurance earnings information and community 
college administrative records to collect earnings data, each state 
varies in its ability to collect such data because state laws, 
reporting procedures and higher education agency organizations differ 
by state.

* Job training programs under Title I of the Workforce Investment Act 
require states and localities to track participant performance. The 
performance measures gauge program results in areas of job placement, 
employment retention and earnings changes, as well as skill attainment 
and customer satisfaction. Our survey results, however, showed that 
only 27, 62, and 63 percent of community colleges and technical schools 
reported participating in WIA Youth, Adult Education and Dislocated 
Worker programs, respectively, and are thus subject to these reporting 
requirements. In addition, as we previously reported, these data are 
not comparable across states for a variety of reasons.[Footnote 23]

National Studies of Credit Programs Indicate that Over Half of 
Community College Students Meet Their Goals:

Given the differences in outcome data collection efforts by schools, 
states, and federal programs, the most reliable data on community 
college student outcomes flow from national studies conducted by the 
National Center for Education Statistics. National data are unavailable 
showing education and employment outcomes for students enrolled in 
noncredit occupational programs. However, NCES has conducted several 
studies that provide some insight on the extent to which community 
college students who are enrolled in accredited academic and 
occupational programs meet their educational or employment goals. An 
NCES report issued in June 2003 draws upon three earlier studies to 
provide data on student outcomes based on representative samples or 
cohorts of students that attended community colleges.[Footnote 24] The 
findings of this report suggest that the national success rate for 
community college students, as measured by transfer to a 4-year 
institution or completion of a degree or certificate, is between half 
and two-thirds of students who enroll with intentions to transfer or 
earn a credential. For example:

* Results from one study showed that 51 percent of community college 
students seeking some type of academic credential either received a 
degree or certificate (39 percent) or transferred to a 4-year 
institution (12 percent) within 6 years of initiating their 
studies.[Footnote 25]

* A second study[Footnote 26] found that for a group of 1992 high 
school graduates that enrolled in public 2-year institutions by 
December 1994, 63 percent of students seeking an academic credential 
either received a degree, certificate, or license (50 percent) or had 
attended a 4-year institution (13 percent) as of 2000.

Both studies asked students who did and did not achieve their goals to 
assess the impact of their postsecondary education on a variety of 
labor market outcomes. Results showed that students who completed a 
degree or certificate were more likely to say that their postsecondary 
education increased their employment prospects (job opportunities, job 
responsibilities, or salary) than those who left without obtaining a 
credential.

In 1995, NCES conducted a survey on remedial education in higher 
education institutions and found that about two-thirds or more of 
community college students successfully completed remedial courses 
taken in reading (72 percent), writing (71 percent), and mathematics 
(66 percent).[Footnote 27] Our recent survey of community colleges and 
technical schools found similar results, as shown in table 6, for both 
remedial and three types of basic skills courses.

Table 6: Percent of Students Passing below College-Level (Remedial) and 
Three Types of Basic Skills Courses during Fall Term of 2002 and 
Percent of Responding Schools with that Type of Course that Provided 
Data:

Type of course: Below college-level (remedial); 
Median percent of students passing/percent of responding schools that 
provided data: 66/ 95.

Type of course: Adult Basic Education (ABE); 
Median percent of students passing/percent of responding schools that 
provided data: 60/82.

Type of course: English as a Second Language (ESL); 
Median percent of students passing/percent of responding schools that 
provided data: 71/ 85.

Type of course: General Educational Development (GED) examination 
preparation; 
Median percent of students passing/percent of responding schools that 
provided data: 65/85. 

Source: GAO survey of community colleges and technical schools, 2004.

[End of table]

Concluding Observations:

Community colleges and technical schools are playing an important role 
in helping to build and sustain the U.S. workforce. In the coming 
decade, this role may take on greater importance as both the demand for 
educated and trained workers and the number of Americans needing 
additional education and training to escape poverty continue to 
increase. These institutions can adapt quickly to changing local 
economic needs, in part, through noncredit programs and contract 
training that offer both individuals and employers an array of 
education and vocational experiences needed to support shifting 
workforce demands. At the same time, these schools are maintaining 
their position as a critical vehicle for students seeking 2-year 
degrees or moving on to 4-year institutions. National studies conducted 
by the Department of Education provide some information about community 
college student outcomes for those enrolled in these degree programs. 
However, much less is known about the outcomes of contract and 
noncredit training initiatives--and because many of these efforts are 
customized to meet specific local employer needs, national studies may 
not be the most appropriate methodology. Rigorous, localized research 
studies may provide information about the extent to which these efforts 
are addressing the needs of local economies and the employers and 
workers in them.

Agency Comments:

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Education, 
Health and Human Services, and Labor for their review and comment. The 
Departments of Education and Labor had no comments on the report. The 
Department of Health and Human Services provided technical comments, 
which we incorporated as appropriate.

We will send copies of this report to the Secretaries of Education, 
Health and Human Services, and Labor; to appropriate congressional 
committees; and to other interested parties. In addition, the report 
will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site at http://www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions or wish to discuss this 
material, please call me at (415) 904-2272 or Cindy Ayers at (206) 654-
5591.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

David D. Bellis: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues:

[End of section]

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

In conducting our work, we administered a Web-based survey to all 
public, regionally accredited, less than 4-year institutions throughout 
the country; conducted telephone interviews of community college 
experts and relevant associations; visited 3 states; and interviewed 
representatives from a fourth state by telephone. We also interviewed 
officials at the Departments of Education, Health and Human Services, 
and Labor, and reviewed existing data and literature to gather what is 
known about community colleges and technical schools, their outcomes 
and the policies and funding sources that support academic preparation 
and workforce development at these schools. We relied on the findings 
of national outcomes studies regarded to be authoritative by 
researchers and other experts in the field. A social science analyst 
examined each study to assess the validity and reliability of selected 
results for use as evidence in this report. We examined descriptive 
information from the National Center for Education Statistics, 
including the Beginning Postsecondary Students Longitudinal Study and 
the Digest of Education Statistics. The American Association of 
Community Colleges and the Association for Career and Technical 
Education provided letters of support for our national survey. We 
conducted our work from May 2003 to August 2004 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

The Survey:

To document the academic preparation and workforce training programs 
offered by public community colleges and technical schools, the 
students they serve, the education and employment outcomes of former 
students in these programs and efforts to measure outcomes, as well as 
to obtain information on the state policies and federal funds that 
support schools' workforce development activities, we conducted a Web-
based survey of all public, regionally accredited, less than 4-year 
institutions throughout the country and received a 71 percent response 
rate.[Footnote 28] We sent the survey to keyholders of the Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System, and asked them to coordinate 
responses with school officials most knowledgeable about particular 
issues raised in the survey. While we did not independently verify the 
accuracy of the self-reported information provided by these schools, we 
took a series of steps, from survey design through data analysis and 
interpretation, to minimize potential errors and problems. We analyzed 
the survey data by calculating descriptive statistics of community 
colleges and technical schools.

The Study Population:

We used 2000-01 data from the Department of Education's Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System to identify the study population. 
Education administers IPEDS surveys to collect data from all primary 
providers of postsecondary education. In order to identify our study 
population of 2-year public community colleges and technical schools 
from this list, we systematically eliminated the records of 
institutions that were inactive, that were private, that offered 4-year 
degrees, and that were not regionally accredited. There were 1,070 
institutions that met these criteria and that became our study 
population. We assessed the reliability of the IPEDS database through a 
review of related documentation and by conducting electronic checks, 
and we found it to be sufficient for the purpose of identifying the 
study population.

Developing the Survey:

To identify potential questions, we spoke with numerous researchers as 
well as officials at organizations relevant to community colleges and 
technical schools, including the American Association of Community 
Colleges, Association for Career and Technical Education, Community 
College Research Center, League for Innovation in the Community 
College, National Governors Association, National Association of 
Manufacturers, and the US Chamber of Commerce, among others. During 
these discussions, we focused on (1) the general categories of programs 
offered by community colleges and technical schools; (2) various 
measurements of the extent of a school's offerings in a given program 
category; and (3) limitations of existing data on community colleges 
and technical schools and areas for further exploration. We received 
formal endorsement for our survey from the American Association of 
Community Colleges and the Association for Career and Technical 
Education through letters of support to their member institutions 
encouraging participation in our forthcoming survey. In addition, 
throughout our survey design, we sought feedback on the questionnaire 
from community colleges and technical schools themselves, many of which 
participated in various survey pretests and a full-scale pilot survey 
test sent to a small random sample of 12 community colleges and 
technical schools that represented different sizes and levels of state 
support in November 2003.

Administering the Survey:

We conducted the survey between February and May 2004 via the World 
Wide Web. We sent a link to the survey via e-mail to the IPEDS 
keyholder at each of the schools. IPEDS keyholders are responsible for 
responding to the IPEDS surveys. We obtained the e-mail addresses of 
these keyholders from the IPEDS database.

Nonsampling Error:

The practical difficulties of conducting any survey can result in 
nonsampling errors. For example, measurement errors can be introduced 
if respondents have difficulty interpreting a particular question, if 
they do not have access to information necessary to answer a particular 
question, or if they make errors in navigating a Web-based 
questionnaire. In order to minimize these errors, we conducted in-depth 
pre-testing of the questionnaire with IPEDS keyholders and their 
designees. During these pretests, we assessed the extent to which 
questions and response categories were interpreted in a consistent 
manner, the length of time needed to complete the survey, and the 
extent to which respondents had information available to answer our 
survey questions. In addition to conducting pretests, we performed 
computer analyses of completed questionnaires in order to identify 
obvious errors and internal inconsistencies among responses. Depending 
upon the extent of a particular error, we either corrected responses or 
deleted responses altogether. Finally, all computer syntax used to both 
identify inaccurate responses and to calculate summary statistics 
presented in this report was verified by independent programmers to 
ensure that it was written and executed correctly.

Response Rates:

We took several steps to maximize response rates. We sent our study 
population two follow-up email messages, one on February 26, 2004, and 
the other on March 8, 2004. Each of these messages contained 
instructions for completing the survey and contact information to 
submit questions. We extended the initial deadline from March 12, 2004, 
to May 7, 2004, in order to allow additional institutions to submit 
completed questionnaires. Finally, we hired contractors to telephone 
institutions that had not yet responded between April 6, 2004, and 
April 13, 2004, to remind them to complete the questionnaire.

Of the 1,070 questionnaires sent to our study population, we received 
758, for a total response rate of 71 percent. In spite of this overall 
response rate, many of the questionnaires were incomplete with item 
response rates ranging from 51 to 100 percent. Because we found 
evidence of pre-existing differences between respondents and 
nonrespondents and excessive missing data on some questions, we did not 
use the survey data to generalize to the entire study population. 
Rather, our conclusions reflect the responses of those who participated 
in the survey and provided substantive answers to our questions. We 
noted in the report the number of responses to any questions with item 
response rates less than 90 percent.

Site Visits:

We supplemented our survey data with in-depth information from state 
officials and community colleges and technical schools in Florida, 
North Carolina, Texas, and Washington. We chose these states based on 
recommendations that considered factors such as credit and noncredit 
course funding, outcome tracking, workforce development efforts, and 
geographic location. We interviewed a variety of officials from state 
education and labor agencies in order to understand the unique 
interplay between community colleges and technical schools and 
workforce development programs and policies at the state and local 
levels. We also examined two or more schools in each state, except for 
Texas where we visited one, basing our decisions on recommendations 
from community college, technical school, and workforce experts; school 
enrollment; and locale. In addition, we visited community colleges in 
four other states--California, Maryland, Oregon and Virginia--to 
pretest the survey. In all, we pretested the survey at 14 schools in 6 
states across the country, which included a mix of community colleges 
and technical schools, and an adult education center.

[End of section]

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Cindy Ayers (206) 654-5591 (ayersl@gao.gov) 
Robert Miller (206) 287-4812 (millerr@gao.gov):

Staff Acknowledgments:

In addition to the individuals named above, Carolyn Boyce, Mark Braza, 
Ellen Chu, Susan Lawless, Avani Locke, Brittni Milam, John Mingus, 
Charles Novak, and Stanley G. Stenersen made key contributions to this 
report.

FOOTNOTES

[1] DeNavas-Walt, Carmen, Bernadette D. Proctor, and Robert J. Mills, 
U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Reports, P60-226, Income, 
Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2003, U.S. 
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.: 2004.

[2] Monthly Labor Review, Employment Outlook: 2002-12, Industry Output 
and Employment Projections to 2012, Jay M. Berman, February 2004. 

[3] The 758 respondents to our survey included 634 community colleges, 
94 vocational or technical schools, 3 high schools offering 
postsecondary programs, 23 other schools (e.g., junior colleges), and 4 
schools that did not provide their school type, all of which were 
included in our analysis. Throughout this report, we refer to all these 
respondents as "community colleges and technical schools."

[4] We also visited community colleges and technical schools in 
California, Maryland, Oregon, and Virginia to pretest the survey. 

[5] Enrollments for 1996 and later years are for degree-granting 
institutions (institutions that award degrees at the associate level or 
higher and were eligible to participate in Title IV federal financial 
aid programs). All other years are for institutions of higher 
education.

[6] National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), Digest of 
Education Statistics 2002, June 2003 and NCES, Projections of Education 
Statistics to 2013, Washington, D.C.: October 2003.

[7] Other frequently reported offerings at the surveyed schools were 
engineering technologies and technicians, agriculture and related 
sciences, security and protective services, and personal and culinary 
services.

[8] For example, students enrolled in academic credit programs may also 
be enrolled in remedial math or English.

[9] Funded in part through the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied 
Technology Education Amendments of 1998.

[10] About 87 percent of survey respondents provided data for this 
question.

[11] Education Commission of the States, State Policies on Community 
College Remedial Education: Findings from a National Survey, Denver, 
Colorado: September 2002. 

[12] Formulas were developed through a legislative process or by an 
entity such as the state higher education coordinating board.

[13] Education Commission of the States, State Funding for Community 
Colleges: A 50-State Survey, Denver, Colorado: November 2000.

[14] Study conducted for the National Council for Continuing Education 
and Training (NCCET) by Larry J. Warford, assisted by NCCET 2000-01 
regional representatives.

[15] In Texas, nearly all public community and technical colleges serve 
as adult education partners in the delivery of basic skills programs.

[16] Similarly, the President of a Washington State community college 
cited challenges identifying funding sources for high start-up costs 
associated with some new training programs.

[17] Published data are unavailable for 1997-98 and 1998-99.

[18] We chose these nine programs in consultation with community 
college experts and a review of the relevant literature. Schools were 
asked to include all federal funding received through each of the nine 
programs, including federal funding that was passed through the state. 
About 18 percent of survey respondents did not respond as to whether or 
not they included federal funding passed through the state. 

[19] Education Commission of the States, State Funding for Community 
Colleges: A 50-State Survey, Denver, Colorado: November 2000.

[20] Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, Community and Technical 
Colleges Division, 2003 Statewide Annual Licensure Report, August 2003, 
Austin, Texas.

[21] The College System has issued performance reports each year since 
1990. For the most current report, see North Carolina Community College 
System, Planning, Accountability, Research & Evaluation, 2004 Critical 
Success Factors for the North Carolina Community College System, 
Fifteenth Annual Report, June 2004, Raleigh, North Carolina.

[22] U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education 
Statistics, Descriptive Summary of 1995-1996 Beginning Postsecondary 
Students: Three Years Later (NCES 2000-154) L. Becker, L. Horn, M. 
Clune. Washington, D.C.: 2000 and U.S. Department of Education, 
National Center for Education Statistics, Nontraditional 
Undergraduates (NCES 2002-012) Susan Choy. Washington, D.C.: 2002.

[23] See GAO, Workforce Investment Act: Improvements Needed in 
Performance Measures to Provide a More Accurate Picture of WIA's 
Effectiveness, GAO-02-275 (Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2002).

[24] U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education 
Statistics, Community College Students: Goals, Academic Preparation, 
and Outcomes, NCES 2003-164 by Gary Hoachlander, Anna C. Sikora, and 
Laura Horn. Project Officer: C. Dennis Carroll. Washington, D.C.: 2003.

[25] U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education 
Statistics, 1996/01 Beginning Postsecondary Students Longitudinal 
Study, (BPS: 96/01).

[26] U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education 
Statistics, National Education Longitudinal Study of 1998 (NELS:88/
2000), "Fourth Follow-up, 2000, Data Analysis System."

[27] U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education 
Statistics, Remedial Education at Higher Education Institutions in Fall 
1995, (NCES 97-584) Washington, D.C.: 1996.

[28] We received responses from 758 of the 1,070 public community 
colleges and technical schools in our survey population. 

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