Community Colleges



Community colleges, which are located in or near virtually every community across our nation, provide pathways to careers through workforce education and training aligned to in-demand sectors, and they serve as the primary hub for workforce and economic development in many communities. In addition to providing high-quality occupational certificates and credentials, associate’s and, in some cases, bachelor’s degrees, community colleges are leaders in delivering dual or concurrent enrollment programs to high school students, with enrollment in such programs growing.  Community colleges also participate as eligible training providers in the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Title I workforce development system, and design and lead career and technical education programs. They are excellent and affordable springboards to a bachelor’s degree and beyond by preparing students to transfer to a four-year institution of higher education—or, increasingly, by offering bachelor’s degree programs of their own.

Contact Us: communitycolleges@ed.gov

Facts at a Glance

The rapid evolution of community colleges can make it challenging to track them in national statistics because they do not fit neatly into a single category.  To identify community colleges in the National Center for Education Statistics’ Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), we consider an institution of a higher education to be a community college if it is publicly controlled, and either awards only associate‘s degrees and certificates or awards associate degrees, certificates, and bachelor’s degrees, but less than 50 percent of the credentials it awarded in the prior school year were bachelor’s degrees.  We also consider Tribal colleges and universities chartered by Tribal governments to be community colleges if they meet either of these latter criteria.

Institutions

Enrollment

Credentials

Finances

Community College Initiatives

Raise the Bar: Lead the World is the U.S. Department of Education's call to action to transform education and unite around what truly works—based on decades of experience and research—to advance educational equity and excellence.  It includes two initiatives that are particularly relevant to community colleges:

Raise the Bar: Unlocking Career Success is an interagency initiative that reimagines how our nation’s high schools prepare all students to thrive in their future careers. This joint effort across the U.S. Departments of Education, Labor, and Commerce will support public and private sector leaders, government agencies, and other community-based organizations to help students earn postsecondary degrees and industry credentials that our employers need, and our economy demands.

Raise the Bar: College Excellence and Equity is an initiative carried out in collaboration with partners at the state and national levels, institutions of higher education, and other stakeholders to invest in inclusive institutions, highlight proven approaches, and expand transparency to help students make good choices and to help colleges improve.

Free Community College is President Biden’s FY 2025 budget proposal to ensure eligible first-time students and workers wanting to reskill can enroll in a community college to earn a degree or credential for free. Students enrolled in a degree or certificate program, attending at least half-time, and making satisfactory academic progress would have tuition and fees eliminated. Students would be able to use the benefit over three years and, if circumstances warrant, up to four years, with the recognition that many students’ other financial responsibilities can make full-time enrollment cost prohibitive.

Research

The Institute of Education Sciences (IES) in the U.S. Department of Education is the nation's leading source for rigorous, independent education research, evaluation and statistics.  IES has made several notable investments in research to identify strategies that can improve the outcomes of students attending community colleges.

Access

The Accelerating Recovery in Community Colleges Network (ARCC) focuses on strategies for helping students to enroll in and return to college after the COVID-19 pandemic. The ARCC Network Lead is conducting two research studies:

Members of the ARCC Network are carrying out related projects:

Success

Equity

Federal Funding Opportunities for Community Colleges

Competitive grant programs for which community colleges are eligible extend across the federal government. While not an exhaustive list, this compilation highlights dozens of competitive grant programs in the U.S. Department of Education and other federal agencies that are available to community colleges.

U.S. Department of Education

Office of Career, Technical, and Adult Education

Office of English Language Acquisition

Office of Elementary and Secondary Education

Office of Postsecondary Education

Other Federal Agencies

U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. Department of Defense

U.S. Department of Labor

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

National Science Foundation (NSF)

U.S. Department of Transportation

Student Scholarship and Internship Opportunities

U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)

U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Smithsonian Institution


Last Modified: 04/05/2024