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Report / In Depth

Moving Up: Lessons from TAACCCT on Career Pathway Progression

moving up

Abstract

Through the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) grant program, the federal government charged community colleges across the country with two things: training adults who had lost their jobs so they could regain employment and providing the education needed for those still working to be able to move up career ladders. Now, as health and economic concerns rise in this time of COVID-19, disproportionately impacting racially minoritized populations, low-income groups, and women, we need to understand how the TAACCCT investment worked and how it could inform future policy and practice.

Acknowledgments

I want to thank Lumina Foundation for the generous support that made this work possible. I am grateful for the insights and encouragement I received from members of the Center for Education & Labor at New America (CELNA) team, including Mary Alice McCarthy, Iris Palmer, Ivy Love, and Sophie Nguyen, as well as Sabrina Detlef. I am also grateful to Elizabeth Apple Meza and Grant Blume who collaborated on the first phase of this project and to Barbara Endel who partnered to synthesize career pathways research outside of TAACCCT that created the analytical framework for this brief. Finally, I want to express my gratitude to the many TAACCCT grantees and third-party evaluators who participated in interviews and guided my thinking on career pathways progression and upward mobility.

More About the Authors

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Debra Bragg

Fellow, Community Colleges

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

Moving Up: Lessons from TAACCCT on Career Pathway Progression

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