Project Kitty Hawk is trying to reenroll students who left the UNC System. Is it working?

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Miyaka Mackie went straight to college after she graduated from high school. She started at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina, but quit after a little more than a year.

That was 28 years ago. Since then, Mackie married, had four daughters and finished her associate degree at Richmond Community College. In 2020, she enrolled at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke with the intention of finishing her bachelor’s degree, but health issues forced her to stop going. 

This fall, Mackie reenrolled at UNC Pembroke as a junior. She has 13 more classes to take before she finishes her degree in sociology.

“I don’t care if I’ve got to take one class at a time,” she said. “I’m going to finish.” 

Mackie, 46, is among almost 2,800 former University of North Carolina System students who have reenrolled after stopping out. A minister and full-time administrative assistant, Mackie attends classes online in the evenings after work.

“I want the degree as a personal accomplishment,” Mackie said. “I love my job, but I’ve spent half my life working on this degree.”

In 2021, the North Carolina General Assembly allocated $97 million to start Project Kitty Hawk, a nonprofit ed-tech startup that would contact students like Mackie. The initiative launched in May 2023, and, as of late August, Project Kitty Hawk had reenrolled almost 2,800 students who had started college at one of the network’s universities but left without finishing their credentials. Most of those students are from North Carolina counties that are considered underserved by higher education, according to Andrew Kelly, director of Project Kitty Hawk and former executive vice president for the UNC System. 

The initiative came about after North Carolina officials realized the state needed more workers with college degrees, said Kelly. The UNC System has 17 separate institutions, including 16 universities and one high school.

The former students Project Kitty Hawk reaches out to are part of a growing nationwide population. In 2022, about 37 million working-age adults in the U.S. had some credit but no credential, up almost 3% from 2021. 

Projects similar to Project Kitty Hawk are underway in other states, including California Reconnect, a coalition currently focused on re-enrolling students from 13 public colleges. Over the next two years, the initiative aims to broaden that scope to 30 higher education institutions in the state. 

College officials nationwide have increasingly focused on enrolling stopped-out students as they brace for the demographic cliff, a decline in high school graduates expected to start in 2025 due to declining birth rates during the Great Recession. 

“We can’t rely on students coming out of high school to earn degrees,” Kelly said. “What about these folks who already have some credit?”

Project Kitty Hawk partners with ReUp Education, one of several companies that work with colleges and universities to contact former students and coach them through re-enrollment. ReUp Education counselors reached out to 103,000 former students from ten universities in the UNC System. Of those students, 40% had stopped out within the past five years, 35% stopped out between six and nine years ago, and another 25% left college more than 10 years ago.

Reenrolled students brought in about $4.5 million in tuition for the system last year, Kelly said. That figure might be an underestimation, he added, because it doesn’t include some student fees. 

Because many reenrolled students don’t need a lot more credits before they can graduate, UNC System officials expect to see another $5 million in tuition from the current population of reenrolled students over the course of their studies.

Most reenrolled students registered at UNC Pembroke, UNC Greensboro and Western Carolina University. The most common fields of study for returning students are business, health sciences, social sciences, interdisciplinary studies and computer sciences.

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