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Minnesota Developmental Education Study

Summary

NCHEMS partnered with Bruce Vandal consulting, WestEd, and Postsecondary Policy Partners on this study for the Minnesota Office of Higher Education and the Minnesota State system. The study, mandated by state legislation, examined developmental education placement, enrollment, completion, and workforce outcomes across the Minnesota State (Minn State) System, which is comprised of 26 community colleges and seven universities. Developmental education, also known as remedial or pre-college coursework, refers to courses that some students are required to take as preparation for college-level English and math courses, but which do not count towards their degree. Previous research indicates that developmental course placement can be correlated with lower rates of student persistence and completion, especially for students of color. The state legislature and the System were seeking to understand how developmental education at Minn State currently compares to best practices and how it impacts students. The system has ambitious equity goals, so it was particularly interested in identifying areas where developmental education has disparate effects on different student populations.

NCHEMS was specifically responsible for quantitative data analysis around trends in developmental education enrollment and student success. We sought to answer the question of how developmental education impacts important student success outcomes and how those impacts vary for different student populations. We analyzed data on placement, enrollment, college-level course success, persistence, graduation, and employment. We disaggregated the data by various student characteristics of interest, including race/ethnicity, age, full-time or part-time status, free/reduced meal status, high school background, English learner status, and enrolled institution.

We discovered that students from marginalized backgrounds — such as those defined by race, English learner status, and family income — are more likely to enroll in developmental coursework. Developmental enrollment negatively affects several important outcomes for these students. Specifically, those who take developmental courses tend to persist and graduate at lower rates compared to their peers, and they also earn lower wages after graduation.

Topics Challenges Approach Impacts Resources

Topics

  • Student Success
  • Developmental Education
  • Equity

Challenges

In order to answer this study’s big questions, NCHEMS needed a vast quantity of data from multiple different sources, including students’ K-12, postsecondary, and employment records. We worked closely with the Minnesota Office of Higher Education to assemble the necessary data via the state’s longitudinal education database and the Minn State System.

Approach

NCHEMS obtained a large quantity of student-level data that allowed us to measure student outcomes at many points along the postsecondary journey, from incoming student placement to enrollment, persistence, graduation, and ultimately employment. The student-level data also allowed us to disaggregate all outcomes by a large number of student characteristics of interest. We performed statistical testing on the data (t-tests, chi-squared tests, and regression analyses) to identify which factors were statistically correlated with student success. We were able to mathematically identify the relationships between various student characteristics, enrollment in developmental education, and successful outcomes of persistence, graduation, and employment.

Impacts

This report was legislatively mandated and will be reviewed by the Minnesota legislature. The Minn State System already has plans to continue reforming its developmental education offerings and placement practices. The System intends for the report to serve as a base of evidence behind those reforms. The report may also inspire increased urgency for reforms or modifications to some already planned changes.

Resources