College Alternatives Risk Tracking Poor Students Away From Opportunity
At the Aspen Ideas Festival, education leaders Shavar Jeffries, Ted Mitchell and Aneesh Sohoni argued that college remains a crucial route to mobility, but only if it is made more accessible, transparent and connected to work without becoming a tracking system. Their central warning was that “college alternatives” can expand opportunity when they are stackable and portable, but can also reproduce inequality when poor, Black, Latino and rural students are steered away from degrees while affluent families still treat college as the default. The panel framed higher education’s task as broader than earnings alone: it must prepare students for changing labor markets while preserving purpose, agency and the ability to choose among futures.
The Aspen Institute·Jun 30, 2026·17 min read