Texas colleges pitch quick credentials as a first step toward higher wages. But students often fall off the path

On paper, Angela Ramirez is taking a path like the one that many Texas policymakers and community college leaders designed to help students like her. With dreams of becoming a nurse, the high school graduate took an eight-week class to earn a nursing aide credential, which helped her land a job at a nursing home in New Braunfels. That job, she thought, would help her enter the health care field while she saved up to pay for her nursing degree.

Over the past decade, short-term certificates have become a popular way for students and workers to quickly learn skills that can lead to better wages. Schools have tried to design these programs as blocks that students can stack on top of one another: First, they get a certificate that only takes a few weeks or months to obtain; then, they use it to get an entry-level job. Those earnings help them shoulder the costs when they return to the classroom to earn their next credential, which in turn will help them get a better-paid job.

The reality, however, is often more complicated.

Read more at The Texas Tribune.

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