Tuesday, June 9, 2026
CVTC named finalist by Aspen Institute for 2027 $1 million Aspen Prize for community college excellence
Today, the Aspen Institute (Aspen) named Chippewa Valley Technical College (CVTC) as one of 10 community college finalists for the 2027 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, the nation’s signature recognition for community colleges.
Backed by $1 million in award funds, the Aspen Prize honors colleges that achieve strong outcomes, focusing on whether students complete credentials that lead to bachelor’s attainment and jobs that pay family-sustaining wages.
Dr. Sunem Beaton-Garcia, CVTC president, said the recognition shines a national spotlight on the work happening at CVTC and throughout the communities the college serves.
“Being named an Aspen Prize finalist is a celebration of our students, whose determination inspires us every day, and of the faculty, staff, alumni, and employer partners who help create pathways to success,” she said. “Delivering meaningful outcomes for students is at the heart of everything we do at CVTC. We work closely with employers to ensure our programs lead to real opportunities, strong careers, and economic mobility for our graduates. This honor reflects the success of our students and the powerful impact community colleges can have on individuals, families, employers, and entire communities."
The United States relies on two-year colleges to help millions of students improve their lives and economic standing while preparing the skilled workforce employers need. Long known for access and affordability, the sector today enrolls 40 percent of all undergraduates nationally, with some programs preparing students for specific jobs and others designed for transfer and bachelor’s attainment at a four-year college or university.
Over the past 25 years, the focus of reforms nationally has been moving from access to success, and as a result, graduation rates have improved by more than 13 percentage points. But post-graduation outcomes still need improvement. To this end, the Aspen Prize finalists have adopted reforms and practices to improve both completion and post-completion outcomes.
The complete list of finalists can be accessed at as.pn/prize.
“Student outcomes like those we see at the 10 finalists cannot be achieved without major reforms to programs of study, student advising systems, and other college practices that we know make a difference,” said Josh Wyner, executive director of the Aspen Institute College Excellence Program. “We’re excited to dive in and learn more about how these colleges accomplished these outcomes so that we can elevate their work and enable 1,000 community colleges nationally to achieve similar success.”
Over nearly two years, the Aspen Prize selection process examines data and reviews applications to identify colleges that achieve strong student outcomes across several areas, including student learning, credential completion, labor market success, and transfer for bachelor’s attainment. Here are some of the outcomes that contributed to this year’s finalists being selected.
The Aspen Prize selection process began in October 2025, when Aspen applied a formula assessing student outcomes to select 200 colleges and invite them to apply for the Prize. From the 170 who applied, a 15-member independent selection committee selected 25 semifinalists, and now 10 finalists, based on comprehensive outcomes data and evidence of the practices that led to those outcomes. In fall 2026, teams of experts will conduct in-depth site visits to each finalist institution and review additional data. The Aspen Prize winner will be selected by an independent Aspen Prize Jury and announced in April 2027.
“I remember what it meant to all of us at Miami Dade College to be named a finalist and ultimately a winner of the Aspen Prize,” said Pascale Charlot, managing director of the Aspen Institute College Excellence Program and former campus president at Miami Dade College. “It not only affirmed the hard work we had done to enact reforms that helped thousands more students succeed, but more broadly recognized the incredible things community colleges could achieve for students and communities in Miami and across the country. I congratulate this year’s finalists and look forward to not just learning from their work, but partnering with my colleagues at Aspen to bring these practices to other institutions in their effort to strengthen outcomes for their students and communities.”
To read more about the selection process and see a list of past winners, visit as.pn/prize.
To support community colleges in assessing their student outcomes, Aspen has developed a free benchmarking tool that includes the full set of metrics used to evaluate nearly 1,000 community colleges. The tool allows institutions to compare outcomes with top-performing peers, incorporating both data from federal sources and from the National Student Clearinghouse. Learn more at as.pn/prizebenchmarking.
The Aspen Prize is funded by the Ascendium Education Group and the Joyce Foundation.
Previous winners are:
- 2025: Southwest Wisconsin Technical College (WI)
- 2023: Amarillo College (TX) and Imperial Valley College (CA)
- 2021: San Antonio College (TX)
- 2019: Indian River State College (FL) and Miami Dade College (FL)
- 2017: Lake Area Technical Institute (SD)
- 2015: Santa Fe College (FL)
- 2013: Santa Barbara City College (CA) and Walla Walla Community College (WA)
- 2011: Valencia College (FL)
Colleges that have won the Aspen Prize are not eligible to apply in subsequent years.