INDIANAPOLIS – Council for Adult and Experiential Learning (CAEL) and the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) today announced the inaugural winners of the Credit for Prior Learning (CPL) Equity Awards, established to highlight and promulgate proven strategies for making CPL more accessible and commonplace among underserved adult learner populations. In an accompanying report, Closing Equity Gaps in Credit for Prior Learning: Tools and Strategies to Recognize All Learning, CAEL and WICHE detail the successes of the winners, including how they closed CPL equity gaps and the outcomes they achieved. The full report is available at cael.org.
Credit for Prior Learning refers to various methods that postsecondary institutions use to evaluate and award credit for learning that comes from work, military or life experiences — CPL is also known as prior learning assessment or recognition of prior learning.
Adults who earn credit for prior learning are 17% more likely to graduate than adults who do not. Despite these benefits, only about 10% of adult college students earn credit through CPL. Moreover, while CPL drives completion for all student demographics, lower-income adults, Black adult students, and community college students are even less likely to participate in CPL. Closing this equity gap is an opportunity to further boost the benefits of CPL by ensuring that it is accessible in particular to those who have been traditionally underserved.
Metro State earned Honorable Mention in the 2024 Equity Awards for its work with the International Institute of Minnesota (IIMN) to increase enrollment from refugee and immigrant students by showing those students that they were already capable of college level work. IIMN is a nonprofit organization that offers free courses to prepare refugees and immigrants for work or higher education in the United States. IIMN was looking for a way to convince their students that they are capable of college level work. Metro State already had a process for evaluating community-based learning. Metro State and IIMN decided to explore whether IIMN’s programs could be the basis for college credit. This project specifically looked at two of IIMN’s programs, English for Work and College Readiness Academy. In the words of Sara Leiste, director, Student Directed Learning, "This program brings together several of Metro’s strengths—serving underrepresented students, community engagement, and awarding credit for prior learning. As implementing this program was one of the first things I worked on when I started at Metro State, it is exciting to see it receiving the recognition it deserves."
Other CPL Equity Award winners include 2024 CPL Equity Champion, Miami Dade College (Florida), CPL Equity Rising Stars Lehman College (New York) and West Los Angeles College (California), and Honorable Mentions Salt Lake Community College (Utah), Capella University (Minnesota), and City University of New York School for Professional Studies (New York).
“We congratulate and thank the 2024 CPL Equity Award winners. We recognize their progress not only to honor their individual achievements but also to chart the way forward for the entire field,” said Earl Buford, CAEL president. “The practices proven effective by their success offer insight and inspiration that can help any institution advance its own CPL program so that more adult learners can benefit from its powerful impact.”
Decades of CAEL research confirm CPL’s profound yet underutilized ability to support student success. In 2020, The PLA Boost, for example, found that students with CPL save time (between nine and 14 months) and money (between $1,500 and $10,200) in earning their degrees, respectively.
"We know that today’s adult learners are looking for efficient, workforce-relevant credentials, and the 2024 CPL Equity Award winners offer promising examples of how institutions of all types can leverage CPL to meet this need for learners we have historically struggled to serve," said Demarée Michelau, WICHE president. "As an organization dedicated to collaboration, innovation, and resource-sharing, WICHE is thrilled to join CAEL in sharing these exciting new approaches to CPL."
While the winning institutions employed a diversity of approaches to increase CPL access and participations, Closing Equity Gaps in Credit for Prior Learning: Tools and Strategies to Recognize All Learning has distilled common themes that emerged to highlight specific strategies that other institutions can operationalize to close their own CPL equity gaps. They include:
- Collecting data to explore the problem.
- Focusing on professional/occupational programs.
- Raising the visibility of CPL.
- Addressing policy across the institution.
- Engaging the whole enterprise.
- Defining equity specifically for the institutional context.
- Leveraging data systems to track progress and success.
- Using CPL creatively to expand access to diverse student populations.
The lessons learned in the advancements made by the CPL Equity Award winners offer insight to inspire practical innovation within any CPL approach or program size. A webinar on May 16 will explore the winning strategies and tools used by the CPL Equity Award winners highlighted in the report; the webinar is free and open to the public. Register online.
About CAEL
Recognizing that adult learners are the backbone of the U.S. economy, CAEL helps forge a clear, viable connection between education and career success, providing solutions that promote sustainable and equitable economic growth. CAEL opens doors to opportunity in collaboration with workforce and economic developers; postsecondary educators; employers and industry groups; and foundations and other mission-aligned organizations. By engaging with these stakeholders, CAEL fosters a culture of innovative, lifelong learning that helps individuals and their communities thrive. A national membership organization established in 1974, CAEL is part of Strada Collaborative, a mission-driven nonprofit. Learn more at cael.org and stradacollaborative.org.
About WICHE
The Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) works collaboratively to expand educational access and excellence for all residents of the West. By promoting innovation, cooperation, resource sharing, and sound public policy, WICHE strengthens higher education’s contributions to the region’s social, economic, and civic life. Visit wiche.edu.