Ohio Colleges Push Union Members to Finish 4-Year Degrees

Two schools in Ohio have teamed up to help union members obtain bachelor's degrees. In a new program called "CSU Career Plus+," Central State University is working with Eastern Gateway Community College to help graduates of the two-year college who are also members of the AFL-CIO finish their four-year degrees in online classes.

Central State is an Historically Black College and University; Eastern Gateway is the largest community college in the state.

Last spring, when the pandemic struck, disrupting both the U.S. economy and education systems, Central State worked with AFL-CIO to provide students with tuition-free college in critical areas including teacher education, criminal justice and business, through Union Plus, a nonprofit that provides benefits and services to members of AFL-CIO-affiliated unions. That benefit encompassed union members in other states as well.

The CSU-CP+ initiative was tested last year with 28 participants. Since then it has grown to 1,988 students.

"As the world changes, the virtual experience is enhanced and education needs increase, we see an opportunity to partner and provide offerings to strengthen workforce development globally," said Central State President Jack Thomas, in a statement. "Developing innovative and robust online offerings allows us to be more accessible as we prepare talent."

Calling Central State's online classes a "game-changer" for working adults with "motivation," Thomas noted that the programs have also become "a major component in our school's social justice mission to reach otherwise underserved and underrepresented communities. Our ability to reach them where they are allows us to expand our institution's reach and opportunity to produce more teachers, public safety professionals and business entrepreneurs."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Analyst or Scientist uses a computer and dashboard for analysis of information on complex data sets on computer.

    Anthropic Study Tracks AI Adoption Across Countries, Industries

    Adoption of AI tools is growing quickly but remains uneven across countries and industries, with higher-income economies using them far more per person and companies favoring automated deployments over collaborative ones, according to a recent study released by Anthropic.

  • businessmen shaking hands behind digital technology imagery

    Microsoft, OpenAI Restructure AI Partnership

    Microsoft and OpenAI announced they are redefining their partnership as part of a major recapitalization effort aimed at preparing for the arrival of artificial general intelligence (AGI).

  • computer monitor displaying a collage of AI-related icons

    Google Advances AI Image Generation with Multi-Modal Capabilities

    Google has introduced Gemini 2.5 Flash Image, marking a significant advancement in artificial intelligence systems that can understand and manipulate visual content through natural language processing.

  • Hand holding a stylus over a tablet with futuristic risk management icons

    Why Universities Are Ransomware's Easy Target: Lessons from the 23% Surge

    Academic environments face heightened risk because their collaboration-driven environments are inherently open, making them more susceptible to attack, while the high-value research data they hold makes them an especially attractive target. The question is not if this data will be targeted, but whether universities can defend it swiftly enough against increasingly AI-powered threats.