Percentage of students beginning postsecondary education at a North Carolina 4-year private institution who complete a degree or credential within 6 years

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Last updated: 2023

= Top southern state :

only available for totals, not available for all indicators



Percent of students beginning postsecondary education at a North Carolina 4-year non-profit, private institution who complete a degree or credential from any institution within 6 years. These rates were updated in 2023, referring to students who began their postsecondary studies in 2017.


North Carolina’s postsecondary completion rate for students who began at a 4-year private institution was 74% in 2023, placing our state 22nd among all states. In Texas, the top-performing Southern state, the rate was 76%. Nationally, Rhode Island had the highest share of beginning 4-year private students earning a degree or credential within 6 years (89%).

By 2030, the goal is to have 80% of students who begin postsecondary at a North Carolina 4-year private institution complete a degree or credential within six years. This goal was set by the myFutureNC Commission.


The postsecondary completion rate represents the rate at which degree- or credential-seeking students complete their studies in a timely fashion. This is partly “a measure of the efficiency with which students complete college.” Specifically, high completion rates mean:

  • more degree production, which is beneficial for economic competitiveness; and
  • a smoothly functioning postsecondary system that can serve more students.

Lower completion rates have costs both to individual students and the communities in which they live. Students who do not complete on time:

“experience costs in terms of receiving lower average earnings, having student debt, and losing time while enrolled in school. Additionally… students who fail to complete a college credential are less likely to go on to work in occupations that offer employment benefits (such as health insurance and pension plans), earn family-sustaining wages, or be civically involved.”


Meeting the 2030 Goal

For North Carolina to meet its 4-year private completion rate goal, an additional 873 students who begin postsecondary education at a 4-year, non-profit private institution need to complete a degree or credential within 6 years.

North Carolina’s postsecondary completion rate of 74% for 4-year private institutions means that almost three out of every four students who began postsecondary studies at one of North Carolina’s 4-year, non-profit private colleges or universities in the fall of 2017 completed a degree or credential by 2023. This completion rate was four percentage points below the national average (78%).

Which NC private university students graduated in 6 years?

By age

Bar chart showing % of first-time, degree-seeking students at 4-year private institutions who earn degree or credential within 6 years, Fall 2017 Cohort, by age, sex, demographic group, enrollment, and overall NC state average.

Students who began postsecondary education at a North Carolina 4-year, non-profit private institution between ages 21 and 24 had the highest completion rates: 80% earned a degree or credential within six years. Students who began college at age 25 or older had the next highest completion rate (77%), followed by students who began at at age 20 or below (73%).

By sex

Female students (77%) had higher completion rates than male students (69%).

By race/ethnicity

Asian students who began postsecondary studies at a North Carolina 4-year non-profit private institution had the highest postsecondary completion rate: 89% completed a degree or credential within six years. White students (82%) had the next highest rate followed by Hispanic (71%) and Black (47%) students.

By enrollment status

Eighty-four percent of North Carolina 4-year private college and university students who were enrolled exclusively full-time completed a degree or credential within six years. In contrast, 26% of students enrolled exclusively part-time earned a degree within six years. The completion rate for students with mixed full- and part-time enrollments was 56%.


Where does the data for postsecondary completion come from?

The data for completion rates by state was downloaded from the National Student Clearinghouse (NSC) Research Center.

The NSC is a nonprofit organization that provides postsecondary enrollment data and verification for more than 3,600 colleges and universities in the United States.

How was the data calculated?

This was a direct download from the NSC Research Center.

Who is included?

From NSC: “first-time-in-college degree-seeking students who started their postsecondary studies at U.S. colleges and universities in the fall of 2017.”

The NSC data includes transfer students.

Who isn’t included?

Non-first-time students, non-degree-seeking students, students who began postsecondary during summer or spring terms, and students who began postsecondary at an institution outside of the United states are not included. Full details on data exclusions are available here.

State-level data is not reported for states with fewer than three postsecondary institutions in a sector.

Collectively, the institutions covered by the NSC data serve 97% of all postsecondary students nationwide and 98% of students in North Carolina. The NSC data does not cover all institutional sectors equally, however, and has lower coverage rates of for-profit institutions. More detail on NSC coverage is available here.

The data used in the development of this indicator is derived from administrative records and is subject to non-sampling error. 


Who is NC is working on this?

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Further research and literature

Bailey, M., & Dynarski, S. (2011). Gains and gaps: changing inequality in U.S. college entry and completion. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.

Burrus, J., Elliott, D., Brenneman, M., Markle, R., Carney, L., Moore, G., Betancourt, A., et al. (2013). Putting and Keeping Students on Track: Toward a Comprehensive Model of College Persistence and Goal Attainment. Princeton, NJ: ETS.

Long, B. T. (2018). The College Completion Landscape: Trends, Challenges, and Why it Matters. Washington, DC: Third Way.

Shapiro, D., Dundar, A., Huie, F., Wakhungu, P. K., Bhimdiwala, A., & Wilson, S. E. (2018). Completing College: A National View of Student Completion Rates – Fall 2012 Cohort (Signature Report No. 16). Herndon, VA: National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.

Tippett, R., & Kahn, N. (2018a). Postsecondary Completion Report: 2009-2011 North Carolina Public High School Graduates. Raleigh, NC: myFutureNC.

Tippett, R., & Kahn, N. (2018b). Postsecondary Pathways & Barriers to Opportunity Report: 2009-2011 NC Public High School Graduates. Raleigh, NC: myFutureNC.

FAQ

Who is identified as a first-time student?

The National Student Clearinghouse defines first-time students as individuals who “did not have a previous enrollment record, as shown in the Clearinghouse data, prior to the first day of enrollment in the fall of 2012, unless the previous enrollment record was before the student turned 18 years old (dual enrollment).” This analysis further excluded individuals who had previously received “any degree or certificate from a postsecondary institution prior to the first day of enrollment in the fall of 2012…unless the award date was before the student turned 18 years old (dual enrollment).”

Does this indicator include students who may be casual course takers with no intention of earning a degree?

No. The National Student Clearinghouse attempts to limit this analysis to only degree-seeking students and “attempted to exclude non-degree-seeking, casual course takers from the [analysis]. For students who first enrolled in four-year institutions, non-degree-seeking students were defined as those who had only one enrollment record with intensity of less than half time.” Students who started at two-year institutions were identified as non-degree-seeking students “if they failed to meet one of the following criteria: (1) one or more full-time enrollments before August 11, 2013; and (2) one or more three-quarter time [enrollments] before December 31, 2013; and (3) two enrollment terms with half-time status before December 31, 2013.”


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