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Hispanic Heritage Month: Recognizing & Supporting Student Achievement

by NSC Blog | Sep 16, 2024 | Postsecondary Data Partnership, Current Term Enrollment, Research Reports, Signature Reports, StudentTracker, StudentTracker for High Schools, StudentTracker for Outreach

As we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, from September 15 to October 15, the National Student Clearinghouse recognizes Hispanic students’ essential contributions and achievements in higher education.

We also recognize the critical role institutions play in helping students navigate and succeed in higher education—and want to highlight how colleges and universities can use Clearinghouse’s learner insights to support Hispanic students in their higher education and career pursuits.

First some recent insights on Hispanic students in higher education from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center:

A Greater Percentage of Hispanic Students are Continuing Past their Freshman Year: Our most recent Persistence and Retention report—persistence referring to students returning to college at any institution for a second year, and retention capturing returns to the same institution—revealed a year-over-year increase in Hispanic students continuing their pursuit of higher education, increasing 0.5% from fall 2021 to fall 2022.

However, there is still work to be done. Institutions continue to retain Hispanic students — along with Black and Native American students — at rates significantly below the national rate (63.6%, 56.6%, and 52.8%, respectively, compared to 68.2% nationally). Moreover, there was more muted growth in retention rates for Hispanic students who entered college in fall 2022 compared to gains nationally. This represents a reversal of the pattern over the previous academic year, when Hispanic students’ retention rate increase outpaced the growth of the national rate.

More Hispanic Students are Re-Enrolling After Previously Stopping Out: The June 2024 Some College, No Credential report measured the number of students “stopping out” of college without a credential as of July 31, 2022. Hispanic students comprised 24.4% of the “some college, no credential” (SCNC) population among those who entered in 2013 or later, compared to 21.5% of all enrolled undergrads in the 2022-23 academic year. The results of students who re-engaged with postsecondary education in 2022-23 academic year uncovered some promising news for Hispanic students. There were higher rates of Hispanic re-enrollment in the 2022-23 academic year, reversing declines from the previous year. The report also found a higher share of Hispanic SCNC students re-enrolling in associate degree programs (60.7%) than all other reported racial and ethnic groups.

Number of Hispanic Students Completing Undergraduate Degrees has Grown by Nearly Half Since 2016: In the 2022-2023 academic year, over 568,000 Hispanic students earned their undergraduate credential, as reported in the April 2024 Undergraduate Degree Earners report. While that is a 1% decrease from the previous academic year, the number of Hispanic completers grew in each of the previous seven years before that. In fact, the number of Hispanic undergraduate completers per year grew 46% from the 2015-2016 to the 2022-2023 academic year.

Tools for Institutions: The Clearinghouse has tools to help institutions make data-driven, student-centered decisions to improve learner outcomes. With our tools for secondary and postsecondary educators and educational organizations, including StudentTracker and the Postsecondary Data Partnership (PDP), academic leaders can harness the power of our unique national student data resources to understand learner pathways and outcomes and help learners succeed. In addition, the Clearinghouse offers custom research services to help address specific questions, providing insights that are relevant and actionable.

During this Hispanic Heritage Month, let’s honor the achievements of Hispanic students in higher education and celebrate the invaluable contributions of Hispanic educators who are shaping a more inclusive and equitable learning environment for all students.

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