Abstract
In an effort to improve developmental education students' outcomes, community colleges have been experimenting with acceleration strategies. Models of acceleration allow students to complete their developmental requirements in a shorter amount of time. However, there has been limited empirical research on the effects of accelerating students' progression through their developmental requirements. We examined the impact of a basic form of acceleration—enrollment in shorter versus longer developmental education sequences— on access to introductory college coursework, performance in that coursework, overall college credit accumulation, and degree attainment at the City University of New York community colleges. In general, we found that accelerating students through developmental education in shorter sequences results in greater access to college-level coursework and long-term success but may have consequences for student performance in college-level coursework.
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Notes on contributors
Michelle Hodara
Michelle Hodara is a Senior Researcher at Education Northwest in Portland, Oregon; [email protected].
Shanna Smith Jaggars
Shanna Smith Jaggars is the Assistant Director of the Community College Research Center at Teachers College, Columbia University.