After a slow start, California's Calbright College recalibrates on preparing students for today's labor market. ADVERTISEMENT [The Edge Logo]( Did someone forward you this newsletter? [Sign up free]( to receive your own copy. You can now read The Chronicle on [Apple News]( [Flipboard]( and [Google News](. Iâm Goldie Blumenstyk, a senior writer at The Chronicle covering innovation in and around higher ed. This week I share insights from the leader of an unusual public start-up college on how sheâs been steering the institution through its rocky first years. And a personal note: Last week marked 35 years for me as a reporter at The Chronicle, a stretch that astounds me, considering that when I moved from the city-hall beat at the Orlando Sentinel to take this gig in D.C., I thought Iâd move on to another job after a year â or two, max. Instead I spent my first four years here covering state politics and policy, and quickly found that higher ed offered a great lens through which to learn about America. Since then, through many different beats (business, IT, tech transfer) and many different journalistic experiments (news on the web, synchronous online chats, blogs, videos, podcasts, live events, and this newsletter), Iâve learned so much from all of you. Higher ed is a vastly different beast today than when I started â journalism, too. But for me, the journey continues. ADVERTISEMENT SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Enjoying the newsletter? [Subscribe today]( for unlimited access to essential news, analysis, and advice. A college for working adults begins to hit its stride Iâll admit it: Iâve had to pause whenever Iâve been tempted to write something judgy on [the flagging enrollment and low completion rates]( Calbright College, Californiaâs online community college, created in 2018 to help working adults get a leg up in the job market. Iâve resisted by reminding myself how many times I (and others) weighed in on the slow pace of enrollment at Western Governors University in its early years. Today, with an enrollment of more than 145,000, WGU[is spreading its wings in several directions]( as I reported a year ago, and is the largest online university in the country. This will date me â again â but [the first of those enrollment stories, in 1998,]( noted that only 75 people had applied in the first weeks after WGUâs âWorld-Wide Web site for enrollmentâ opened. The parallels are on othersâ minds, too. Calbrightâs second president and chief executive, Ajita Talwalker Menon, tells me she often compares notes with WGUâs president, Scott Pulsipher, and takes a lot of comfort in that other pioneering online institutionâs history. Early on, Menon notes, observers âdeclared WGU a failure every year.â Calbright, too, started off slowly, but recently itâs been on a roll. And its latest moves offer some interesting lessons on ways to design colleges around studentsâ needs. First, a quick recap: Calbrightâs first president [departed abruptly in early 2020]( one year into her four-year contract. A [2021 state audit]( then blamed the institutionâs rocky start on former executives who had âfailed to develop and execute effective strategies for launching the college.â Menon took the reins as an interim in February 2020 to help get Calbright back on track. Weeks later, Covid hit. The college opened its virtual doors in the summer of 2021 with just under 500 students. Now, in the six programs it offers, the college logs enrollment of nearly five times that. As [Cal Matters recently reported]( its enrollment is larger than that of four brick-and-mortar community colleges in the state. And while 40 of the 115 other campuses in the system [continue to shed students]( Calbright is growing by 8 percent a month. As welcome as the enrollment uptick is, Menon says she considers that âthe less exciting partâ of the Calbright story at the moment. More important, she says, is who is enrolling: More than 90 percent of students are 25 or older (more than double the rate for the system as a whole), more than one-third are parents or caregivers, and more than 70 percent identify as Black, Indigenous, Latino, or members of other racial or ethnic minority groups. âWeâre reaching the folks who have fallen out of higher ed,â she told me when we met up last month during the American Council on Educationâs annual meeting in Washington, D.C. âBeing really intentional about growth is the next step.â Calbright is free to all California residents and offers nondegree programs that prepare students for jobs in fields such as IT support and software administration for customer-relationship management. Across six-month terms, the courses are offered in a self-paced model. The programs are designed to be completed in less than a year, assuming students study five hours a week, but as Cal Matters also reported, fewer than 10 percent of students have been hitting that mark so far. Life often interferes with the plans of students like those at Calbright, but still, that needs to improve. I was particularly eager to talk with Menon â whose résumé includes stints in the Obama White House and in the chancellorâs office for Californiaâs community-college system â because of Calbrightâs unusual mission and the difficult circumstances surrounding its launch. Indeed, she still faces many of those, not least that skeptical legislators have sliced $40 million from the initial start-up funding of $100 million over seven years, and reduced the collegeâs annual appropriation to $15 million from $20 million. Menon and I covered a lot of ground, but three themes stood out to me from a pair of conversations. What âstudent-centeredâ looks like there. I hear that term a lot from college leaders, but Calbrightâs moves sound admirably hands-on, like every-other-week info sessions for prospective students; a landing page to help students prep for the CCC Apply system, which isnât exactly user-friendly; and tutoring and peer-mentoring programs designed with plenty of input from students themselves. Calbright also uses Slack as a tool to connect students to one another and to the institution, a deliberate choice for a college focused on preparation for jobs. âThe modern workplace engages and communicates this way,â Menon says. Calbright is also investing heavily in research to guide its design of services for students who often juggle work and family obligations alongside their studies. Already a $4.1-million partnership with the School of Education at the University of California at Irvine (and several affiliated scholars) has produced a new model to help students decide how to pace their progress, with other ânudgeâ strategies expected to follow. (Iâll share more soon, in a future newsletter, about what these UC-Irvine researchers have been up to.) An IT strategy that borrows from industry. After Calbrightâs chief technology officer left in 2022, the college replaced him with a chief product officer. Menon says the new title reflects more than semantics. Itâs a different cultural approach to IT than whatâs traditionally found at colleges, where the CTO often must span silos and weigh one departmentâs or divisionâs needs against anotherâs. For Calbright, the âproductâ is the end-to-end student experience, she says, including all the technology that enables teaching, support services, and the data collection that informs those operations. That shift unapologetically mirrors the way companies now prioritize the customer experience. A market-informed approach to employer relationships. Unlike her predecessor, Heather Hiles, who tried to get big-name employers to pay for partnerships with the college for the opportunity to hire graduates, Menon has been steering Calbright to develop programs that reflect a deep understanding of how adults without degrees enter and then advance in the job market. The shift, Menon says, was a response to those realities. âThe barrier to hire for our community of learners,â she told me, âis higher than people like to admit.â So now, instead of assuming that employers will rush to hire Calbright grads, the college has been collaborating with intermediaries, like local work-force boards and organizations and companies like [Opportunity@Work]( and the apprenticeship provider [Bitwise Industries]( to offer programs that focus on âthe fundamental entry pointsâ that will get their grads in the door â and into positions that offer opportunities to advance. Hiring processes in the public sector are another focus right now, along with the different needs of various regions in the state. Even with these recent developments, Calbright still has a long way to go. Its low completion rates remain problematic, although applying the UCI research could help with that. Until itâs accredited, which it hopes will happen by the end of the year, the college canât offer students credit for prior learning, which is a key part of its mission. And while criticism from lawmakers (and [instructors at other colleges]( in the system) seems to have lessened, findings from another state audit, scheduled to be published in November, could bring a new wave of scrutiny. Menonâs enthusiasm for Calbrightâs mission remains strong. âWe have failed this population in traditional higher ed,â she says. Yet sometimes it seems the criticism of Calbright doesnât account for the challenges the institution is taking on, she adds, or the challenges of getting things up and running at the height of the pandemic. The attention can be wearing. âItâs important to be doing this in the public sector,â Menon says. But also, âit is extraordinarily difficult to do because itâs in the public sector.â What exactly do chief innovation officers do? Join a conversation about how a growing number of institutions are hiring chief innovation officers to help lead new approaches in business strategy and technology. The Chronicleâs Ian Wilhelm and a group of senior leaders will discuss the opportunities and challenges they face, how they are enhancing institutional competitiveness, and how is data playing a role in their decisions. [Sign up here]( to participate live on May 18, from 2 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. Eastern time, or to watch later on demand. Got a tip youâd like to share or a question youâd like me to answer? Let me know, at goldie@chronicle.com. If you have been forwarded this newsletter and would like to see past issues, [find them here](. To receive your own copy, free, register [here](. If you want to follow me on Twitter (yeah, for now at least, Iâm still there), [@GoldieStandard]( is my handle. NEWSLETTER [Sign Up for the Teaching Newsletter]( Find insights to improve teaching and learning across your campus. 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