Community colleges are succeeding—just not in the way we’ve been measuring them

Community college students have long faced metrics that shortchange them. A new report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond offers a clearer picture—and the findings are encouraging.

The 2025 Survey of Community College Outcomes tracked 189 colleges across 10 states and applied a broader definition of student success than the standard federal graduation rate. The result: a 49.8% success rate—nearly 16 percentage points higher than the 33.8% traditional rate for the same schools.

The challenge with measuring community colleges

The federal graduation rate only counts first-time, full-time students who enrolled in the fall. That means part-time students, working adults and students who transferred in with prior credits don’t make the cut—even though they represent a huge share of who community colleges actually serve.

The metric also leaves out students who transfer to a four-year school before earning a degree, even when transfer was the goal. “Community colleges play a critical role in our workforce development system by providing education and programming that enable students and workers to reach their full economic potential,” the report notes. Yet traditional measures haven’t reflected that role.

What the Richmond Fed community college success rate counts instead

The Richmond Fed Success Rate tracks students over four years and casts a wider net. A student counts as successful if they:

  • earned a degree or certificate
  • completed a workforce credential or industry certification
  • transferred to a four-year school
  • stayed enrolled, completed at least 30 credit hours, and kept a 2.0 GPA or better

That last category—persistence—recognizes that for many students, staying on track is itself a meaningful outcome worth recognizing.

Student success varies by age and enrollment

Full-time community college students succeed at a rate of 56.6%, compared to 43.6% for part-time students. Associate degree completion drives much of that gap…

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