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16 12 Supplemental Feature Completing College: Eight Year Completion Outcomes —Fall 2010 Cohort February 2019

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Page 1: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

1612

Supplemental FeatureCompleting College:

Eight Year Completion Outcomes —Fall 2010 Cohort

Febr

uary

201

9

Page 2: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 2

16Completing College: Eight Year Completion Outcomes for the Fall 2010 Cohort

Suggested Citation: Shapiro, D., Dundar, A., Huie, F., Wakhungu, P., Bhimdiwala, A., & Wilson, S. E. (2019, February). Completing College: Eight Year Completion Outcomes for the Fall 2010 Cohort (Signature Report No. 12c). Herndon, VA: National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.

LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 1. Six-Year and Eight-Year Overall Outcomes for the Fall 2010 Cohort .......................................................................4

Figure 2. Six-Year and Eight-Year Overall Outcomes by Starting Institution Type for the Fall 2010 Cohort ............................5

Figure 3. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion at Starting vs. Different Institution by Enrollment Intensity ...........................6

Figure 4. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion Outcomes by Race and Ethnicity ...................................................................7

Figure 5. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion Outcomes by Gender .....................................................................................8

Figure 6. Six-Year and Eight-Year Outcomes for Students Who Started at Four-Year Public Institutions

by Race and Ethnicity .............................................................................................................................................................9

Figure 7. Six-Year and Eight-Year Outcomes for Students Who Started at Two-Year Public Institutions

by Race and Ethnicity ...........................................................................................................................................................10

12

Page 3: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 3

This supplemental feature to our Signature Report on College Completions released in December 2016, contains an analysis of the eight-year completion outcomes for the fall 2010 cohort. In our previous signature reports on college completions, we provided a brief analysis of the eight-year outcomes following the main discussion of six-year outcomes. In response to the growing need for educational researchers to extend the time period given for graduation rate analyses, the Signature Report series on College Completions will now include an expanded examination of the eight-year completion outcomes as a supplemental feature.

Key Results

■ The national total completion rate for the fall 2010 cohort increased 5.6 percentage points, from 54.8 percent at the end of six years to 60.4 percent at the end of eight years.

■ Four-year public and two-year public institution starters had fairly similar completion gains. The completion rate for four-year public starters increased 6.4 percentage points (from 62.4 percent to 68.8 percent) whereas the completion rate for two-year public starters increased 6.0 percentage points (from 39.3 percent to 45.3 percent).

■ Two-year public starters had the highest proportion of completions at a different institution (36.8 percent of all completions) by the end of eight years in comparison to four-year public (24.1 percent) and four-year private nonprofit starters (20.3 percent).

■ The completion rate increased approximately 6 percentage points for both men and women. Overall, women complete a credential at higher rates than men, where the six-year completion rate for women (58.2 percent) is higher than the eight-year completion rate for men (57.4 percent).

■ For four-year public starters, the Hispanic student total completion rate increased 8.3 percentage points, from 55.0 percent to 63.3 percent, representing the largest completion increase in comparison to any other race and ethnicity group. The second largest increase was observed for Asian students (7.4

percentage points increase from 71.7 to 79.2 percent), closely followed by Black students (7.2 percentage points increase from 45.9 percent to 53.1 percent) then white students (6.0 percentage points from 67.2 percent to 73.1 percent).

■ Among two-year public starters, Asian students’ completion rate increased from 43.8 percent at the end of six years to 54.5 percent at the end of eight years, representing an 11 percentage point total increase. This was followed by Hispanic students with a 7.2 percentage point increase (from 33.0 percent to 40.3 percent), white students with a 6.0 percentage point increase (from 45.1 percent to 51.1 percent), and black students with a 5.1 percentage point increase (from 30.9 percent to 33.0 percent).

■ In terms of four-year completions for two-year starters, an additional 13.8 percent of Asian students subsequently completed a four-year degree at the end of eight years (from 23.0 percentage points to 36.8 percentage points), followed by Hispanic students, with an additional 7.9 percent total four-year completions (from 10.8 percentage points to 18.7 percentage points).

A Note on the Data

Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report and the Signature 12 race and ethnicity supplement. It is important to note here that the data used for race and ethnicity analyses was scientifically selected as a stratified random sample of the national student population. Therefore, the race and ethnicity analyses were based on a subset of the national student population. See Signature 12 race and ethnicity supplement on the procedures used to select the sample and ensure representativeness.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURE: EIGHT YEAR COMPLETION OUTCOMES FOR THE FALL 2010 COHORT

Page 4: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 4

Figure 1 shows that overall, regardless of starting institution, the six to eight-year national completion rate rose 5.6 percentage points, from 54.8 percent to 60.4 percent. Completions at a different institution rose 3.6 percentage points, from 12.8 percent at the end of six years to 16.4 percent at the end of eight years. This increase was larger than that in the completion rate at the starting institution, which was 2.0 percentage points. Little change was observed for the no longer enrolled rate, which suggests that drop-out slows down after the sixth year.

Figure 1. Six-Year and Eight-Year Overall Outcomes for the Fall 2010 Cohort

RESULTS

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

Not EnrolledStill EnrolledCompleted at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

Six Year OutcomesOverall

31.9%

13.3%

12.8%

42.0%

Eight Year Outcomes

33.0%

16.4%

44.0%

54.8%60.4%

6.5%

Page 5: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 5

Figure 2. Six-Year and Eight-Year Overall Outcomes by Starting Institution Type for the Fall 2010 Cohort

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%Six Year

OutcomesEight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Four-Year Private NonProfitFour-Year Public Two-Year Public

Not EnrolledStill EnrolledCompleted at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

49.5%

13.0%

24.3%

13.2%

52.2%

16.6%

25.2%

5.9%

60.9%

13.0%

17.7%

8.4%

62.5%

15.9%

17.9%3.7%

26.7%

12.6%

44.9%

15.8%

28.6%

16.7%

46.2%

8.5%

62.4%68.8%

73.9%78.4%

39.3%45.3%

In terms of the overall outcomes by starting institution type, Figure 2 shows that four-year public and two-year public institution starters benefit similarly from an extended time to completion. Specifically, the completion rate for four-year public starters increased 6.4 percentage points (from 62.4 percent to 68.8 percent) whereas the completion rate for two-year public starters increased 6.0 percentage points (from 39.3 percent to 45.3 percent). Although the overall completion rate for four-year private nonprofit starters was the highest at 78.4 percent at the end of eight years, this group also experienced the smallest six- to eight-year gain (4.5 percentage point completion rate increase to 78.4 percent). As expected, two-year public starters had the highest proportion of completions a different institution (36.8 percent of all completions) by the end of eight years in comparison to four-year public (24.1 percent) and four-year private nonprofit starters (20.3 percent).

Page 6: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 6

Figure 3. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion at Starting vs. Different Institution by Enrollment Intensity

80%

90%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%Six Year

OutcomesEight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Excusively Part-TimeExcusively Full-Time Mixed Enrollment

Completed at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

65.2%

10.3%

67.4%

11.5%

18.4%

2.6%

20.2%

3.1%28.0%

15.9%

30.6%

21.3%

75.4%78.9%

21.0% 23.3%

43.9%51.9%

Figure 3 depicts the six- and eight-year outcomes by enrollment intensity. The results show that mixed enrollment students experienced the strongest gains, where their total completion increased 8.0 percentage points, from 43.9 percent at the end of six years to 51.9 percent at the end of eight years. The completion rate for exclusively full-time and exclusively part-time students increased 3.5 percentage points and 2.3 percentage points, respectively. Further, the proportion of students who completed at a different institution was also substantially higher for mixed enrollment students (5.4 percentage points, from 15.9 percent to 21.3 percent) than for exclusively full-time (1.3 percentage points increase from 10.3 percent to 11.5 percent) and exclusively part-time students (0.5 percentage points increase from 2.6 percent to 3.1 percent).

Page 7: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 7

Figure 4. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion Outcomes by Race and Ethnicity

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%Six Year

OutcomesEight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Black WhiteAsian Hispanic

Completed at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

51.0%

12.2%

63.2%

54.0%

17.5%

71.5%

28.7%

9.3%

38.0%

30.6%

13.7%

44.3%

35.6%

10.2%

45.8%

38.7%

14.5%

53.2%

47.5%

14.5%

62.0%

49.2%

18.2%

67.4%

With an additional two years, the eight-year graduation rate increased the sharpest for Asian students, from 63.2 percent to 71.5 percent, representing an 8.3 percentage points total increase (Figure 4). This was followed by Hispanic students, whose total completion rate increased 7.4 percentage points (from 45.8 percent to 53.2 percent). Black students’ completion rate increased 6.3 percentage points (from 38.0 percent to 44.3 percent), whereas white students’ completion rate increased 5.4 percentage points (from 67.4 percent to 62.0 percent).

Page 8: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 8

Figure 5 shows the six- and eight-year completion rate outcomes by gender. These results show that the completion rate increase from six to eight years are generally the same regardless of gender. Specifically, at the end of eight years the completion rate increased approximately 6 percentage points for both men and women. Overall, women complete a credential at higher rates than men. In fact, the six-year completion rate for women (58.2 percent) is higher than the eight-year completion rate for men (57.4 percent).

Figure 5. Six-Year and Eight-Year Completion Outcomes by Gender

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

Completed at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

11.7%

39.8%

51.4%15.4%

42.0%

57.4%

14.3%

44.0%

58.2%

17.9%

46.0%

63.9%

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Men Women

Page 9: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 9

Figure 6 shows the six- and eight-year outcomes by race and ethnicity for students who started in four-year public institutions. The results revealed that the Hispanic and Black student completion rate increased considerably from six years to the end of eight years. With two additional years, the Hispanic student total completion rate increased 8.3 percentage points, from 55.0 percent to 63.3 percent, representing the largest increase in total completion in comparison to any other race and ethnicity group. This was followed by Asian students with a 7.4 percentage point increase (from 71.7 to 79.2 percent), closely followed by Black students with a 7.2 percentage point increase (from 45.9 percent to 53.1 percent). White students had 6.0 percentage points increase in completion rate (from 67.2 percent to 73.1 percent). Hispanic students also had the largest increase (4.2 percentage points) in the proportion of students who completed at the starting institution (from 43.7 percent to 47.9 percent) whereas Black and Hispanic students had the highest increase (4.1 percentage points) in proportion of students completing a credential elsewhere.

Figure 6. Six-Year and Eight-Year Outcomes for Students Who Started at Four-Year Public Institutions by Race and Ethnicity

80%

90%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%Six Year

OutcomesEight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Black WhiteAsian Hispanic

Completed at Different InstitutionCompleted at Starting InstitutionTotal Completion

61.4%

10.3%

71.7%

65.1%

14.0%

79.2%

35.3%

10.6%

45.9%

38.5%

14.7%

53.1%

43.7%

11.3%

55.0%

47.9%

15.4%

63.3%

52.4%

14.8%

67.2%

55.0%

18.1%

73.1%

Page 10: Supplemental Feature...A Note on the Data Detailed methodological information, including data sources, coverage, and cohort definitions can be found in the Signature 12 national report

© 2019 National Student Clearinghouse. All rights reserved. 10

Figure 7 depicts the six- and eight-year outcomes of students who started at two-year public institutions by race and ethnicity. Out of the four race and ethnicity categories examined, Asian students had the highest completion rate increase from 43.8 percent total six-year completion to 54.5 percent at the end of eight years, representing an 11 percentage point increase. This was followed by Hispanic students with a 7.2 percentage point increase (from 33.0 percent to 40.3 percent), white students with a 6.0 percentage point increase (from 45.1 percent to 51.1 percent), and black students with a 5.1 percentage point increase (from 30.9 percent to 33.0 percent). In terms of four-year completions, black students’ total four-year completions increased from 8.6 percent to 13.7 percent whereas Hispanic students’ total four-year completions rate nearly doubled from 10.7 percent to 18.7 percent at the end of eight years.

Figure 7. Six-Year and Eight-Year Outcomes for Students Who Started at Two-Year Public Institutions by Race and Ethnicity

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%Six Year

OutcomesEight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Six YearOutcomes

Eight YearOutcomes

Black WhiteAsian Hispanic

Subsequent Four-YearCompletion1st Completion at Four-Year Institution1st Completion at Two-Year InstitutionTotal Completion30.6%

13.2%

9.8%

43.8%

33.9%

20.5%

16.3%

54.5%

20.6%

5.2%3.4%

25.8%

23.1%

7.8%

5.9%30.9%

27.4%

5.7%5.2%

33.0%

31.3%

9.0%

9.7%

40.3%

33.4%

11.7%

7.5%45.1%

36.2%

14.9%

11.2%

51.1%