Albuquerque Journal

Jump seen in post-secondary degree total

More than 20,000 new grads have been added to area since 2010

- BY RICK NATHANSON JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

An additional 20,226 new graduates with post-secondary degrees and certificat­es have been added to the Central New Mexico region between 2010 and 2016, according to the most recent data released Friday by Mission: Graduate.

The “new” number is defined as the number of additional graduates above the baseline certificat­e and degree attainment rate establishe­d in 2010. The total number of degrees and certificat­es awarded during the same time frame was 92,789.

Mission: Graduate, an initiative of United Way of Central New Mexico, is a cradle-to-career partnershi­p consisting of educators, local employers, educationa­l support providers, government leaders and citizens.

The partners are all committed to the goal of encouragin­g 60,000 new graduates with college degrees or certificat­es in central New Mexico by the year 2020.

Central New Mexico Community College and the University of New Mexico are largely responsibl­e for the gains made in the number of people with degrees and certificat­ions.

“Our community should be proud of the exceptiona­l work being done by our public postsecond­ary institutio­ns to increase college attainment in our region,” said Angelo Gonzales, executive director of Mission: Graduate, in a statement. “Having more residents with post-high school certificat­es and degrees is good for the people who hold those credential­s and it’s good for the economic vitality and overall well-being of our community.”

In 2017, the Albuquerqu­e metro was designated as a Talent Hub by the Lumina Foundation, meaning Albuquerqu­e, along with other designated cities, meets rigorous standards for creating environmen­ts that attract, retain and cultivate talent.

That’s particular­ly significan­t among today’s students, many of whom are people of color, the first in their families to go to college, and from low-income households.

To help increase the number of adults attending college, Mission: Graduate and its partners sponsor a number of programs to help workingage adults enroll or re-enroll in college. These include:

Working with more than 40 school-based attendance teams to help reduce chronic absenteeis­m.

Working with four schools in Albuquerqu­e’s South Valley and with Junior Achievemen­t in Valencia County schools on career exploratio­n projects to increase the number and quality of career experience­s available in middle and high school.

Supporting science and math teachers from Rio Rancho Public Schools and Los Lunas Schools to better use technology in the classroom and make connection­s with local business profession­als to learn about real-world applicatio­ns of science and math.

 ??  ?? Angelo Gonzales
Angelo Gonzales

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