Essential Questions for Employment: High-Quality Postsecondary Education and Workforce Training

Employment Playbook: Chapter 6

Overview

Overview

When young people secure work that pays a living wage, offers benefits, builds skills and provides purpose, they gain a trajectory toward long-term stability and opportunity. Communities can make this possible by aligning workforce systems, expanding access to internships and apprenticeships, engaging employers and ensuring every young person has the support and connections they need to launch a rewarding career.

This is part 6 of StriveTogether’s Cradle-to-Career Outcomes Playbook: Employment. The playbook synthesizes research and practical guidance communities can use to improve postsecondary completion.

High-quality postsecondary education and workforce training ensure that people can access jobs with living wages, stability and strong working conditions. This not only allows individuals to support themselves and build wealth but also strengthens communities and the broader economy. When more people are prepared for rewarding work, it creates pathways to opportunity and long-term prosperity for all.

Question 4

Question 4: Are students completing credentials of value after high school that set them up for success in the workforce?

Why it matters


Completing credentials of value after high school — degrees, certificates or certifications with clear learning outcomes that lead to meaningful employment and further learning — pays off in the labor market. Young people who complete such credentials earn more and face lower unemployment: U.S. data consistently show higher educational attainment is linked to higher earnings and lower jobless rates, while lifetime earnings rise markedly with each step up the credential ladder (e.g., associate and bachelor’s degrees).

What matters most is earning credentials with clear labor-market value: programs aligned to in-demand skills raise the odds of landing a good job and most of those jobs increasingly require postsecondary or “middle-skills” education. Building both education and skills — especially digital, data and customer-facing competencies — alongside the credential strengthens employability and wage growth, and targeted pathways can narrow opportunity gaps for historically marginalized youth.

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Postsecondary certificate or degree completion

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Industry-recognized credential

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Work-force ready education and skills (e.g., digital skills, communication skills, higher-order thinking skills)

Contributing factor

Degree completion for opportunity youth

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Minimum economic return

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Enrollment in graduate education

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Graduate degree completion

Question 5

Question 5: Are there quality pathways for young people who pursue career training that lead to employment in quality jobs?

Why it matters


Career training that leads to quality jobs matters because the economy increasingly demands postsecondary education and verified skills — by 2031, about 72% of U.S. jobs will require some college or training beyond high school (Georgetown’s Center on Education and the Workforce). Evidence from randomized evaluations shows that sector-based programs linking training to in-demand industries (e.g., Year Up, Per Scholas, Project QUEST) produce large and persistent earnings gains, confirming that aligned education-plus-skills pathways translate into better labor-market outcomes.

Career pathways — sequenced education, credentials and work-based learning with wraparound supports — boost credential completion and employment in target sectors, especially when employers help shape curricula and offer work-based experiences. Strong college–employer partnerships make these pathways work at scale by aligning programs to real job demands and smoothing placement into “good jobs,” which are increasingly concentrated among workers with postsecondary training.

Contributing factor

Career pathways


Contributing factor

School and employer partnerships

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

CTE pathway concentration

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to in-demand CTE pathways

Contributing factor

Work-based learning for specific youth populations

Question 6

Question 6: Do students attend postsecondary institutions that provide adequate financial aid and that are adequately funded to offer a quality educational experience?

Why it matters

Adequate financial aid and institutional funding are essential to ensure students can complete college without incurring unmanageable debt or working excessive hours that hinder their success. Insufficient aid disproportionately harms Black, Latine and first-generation students, leading to higher rates of loan default and long-term financial insecurity. Well-funded institutions can reduce these inequities by lowering unmet financial need and providing the supports necessary for students to persist and thrive.

Student loan repayment: Student loan default has serious negative consequences, including restricted access to other loans, increased repayment amounts due to collection costs and damaged credit. Among borrowers, loan delinquency and default disproportionately impact Black and Latine students. Within six years of starting college, 32% of Black borrowers who had begun repayment defaulted on their loans, compared to 20% of Latine borrowers and 13% of White borrowers. First-generation college students are also more than twice as likely to experience delinquency than students with at least one parent who has earned a bachelor’s degree (EW Framework).

Unmet financial need: Higher levels of unmet financial need are likely to lead to more student loan debt or require students to work while enrolled in college, thus affecting their progression through college. In fact, students with more unmet need are less likely to graduate. At least in some states, it is the students with the lowest incomes who tend to have the highest levels of unmet financial need. In addition, Black students are less likely to receive nonfederal grant aid and receive lower average amounts than their peers. The Postsecondary Value Commission shows that Black students are, on average, burdened with approximately $8,300 in unmet financial need, whereas the average unmet need of White students is approximately $1,500 per year of attendance (EW Framework).

Cumulative student debt: Higher student loan debt is associated with decreased rates of home ownership and worse mental health outcomes. Compared to their peers, Black students take out loans more often than other racial and ethnic groups and have more debt on average. Though the amount of debt students accumulate during college is affected by student-level factors such as their expected family contribution (EFC), system-level factors such as the tuition and fees charged by institutions and the amount of grant aid made available to students are the largest contributors to rising student debt. Several factors, including the sector of the institution the student attended, the student’s grade point average (GPA) in college, whether the student attained a degree and their labor market outcomes, also predict the probability of loan default. In particular, students attending for-profit institutions, who tend to be Black at disproportionately high rates, are at especially high risk for loan default (EW Framework)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Student loan repayment

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Expenditures per student

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Unmet financial need

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Cumulative student debt

Question 7

Question 7: Do students have access to adequate support to enable them to succeed academically and in the workforce?

Why it matters

Adequate academic and career supports — things like advising, financial and nonacademic “wraparound” services and employer-aligned training — are critical because they boost persistence in school and translate learning into higher earnings and stable employment. Rigorous evidence shows that comprehensive student-success models such as CUNY’s ASAP doubled community college graduation in randomized evaluations, demonstrating how structured supports change outcomes at scale (MDRC).

Likewise, sector-based programs that couple technical instruction with coaching and real employer connections (e.g., Year Up, Per Scholas/WorkAdvance, and Project QUEST) produce large and sustained earnings gains — among the strongest seen in gold-standard studies (Year Up United; MDRCMobility). These approaches work by linking colleges and employers to co-design curricula, provide work-based learning and smooth placement into in-demand roles (MDRC), which aligns support for students. Because employment and earnings rise with postsecondary attainment and verifiable skills, ensuring equitable access to these supports is a route to economic mobility, especially for students facing structural barriers. 

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to college and career advising


Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Health insurance coverage (including mental health care coverage)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Food security (for college students)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to affordable housing (for college students)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to technology (for college students)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to transportation (for college students)

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Access to child care subsidies (for college students)

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