By Jeff Murphy,
October 17, 2019
WARRENSBURG, MO – The University of Central Missouri has been selected to join Degrees When Due, a national initiative of the Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP), to help students who have some college credit to complete their degrees.
As one of the colleges and universities from 20 states participating in Degrees When
Due, UCM will learn best practices in degree reclamation and provide targeted support while re-engaging students who have paused, or “stopped
out,” their studies. UCM’s participation in the initiative is facilitated through
the Institute for Higher Education Policy, which also is participating in Degrees
When Due through the Missouri Department of Higher Education and Workforce Development.
“Through this partnership, UCM reaffirms our commitment to helping students complete
their degree. We encourage students who had to pause their educational pursuits to
continue their efforts,” said Phillip Bridgmon, Ph.D., UCM provost and vice president
for academic affairs. “As an institution, we pledge that we will provide the programs
and services that facilitates their return and will support our students as they finish
what they started.”
Degrees When Due will grant UCM access to a variety of resources to help more students
complete their degrees and to help the institution audit students’ previously earned
and transfer credits to determine the most efficient pathway to graduation. The program
will benefit the more than 75,647 individuals in Missouri who have been identified
as having some college credits, but no awarded degree.
“Our Degrees When Due institutional and state partners are building a strong pathway
to degree attainment for all students, including by providing an on-ramp for those
who have paused their studies or ‘stopped-out,’” said IHEP President Michelle Asha
Cooper, Ph.D. “IHEP enthusiastically welcomes the selected institutions and states
to this effort. Through this initiative, they will increase student success, serve
a diverse set of student populations, and join us in addressing one of higher education’s
most pressing challenges: degree completion.”