The PennZone

  • Home
  • Non-profit
  • Education
  • Technology
  • Construction
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Software

Pennsylvania: Governor Shapiro Continues to Lead the Nation on Eliminating College Degree Requirements, Garners Praise from Former President Barack Obama
The PennZone/10224703

Trending...
  • United Way and Community Partners Launch Relief Fund to Support Victims of the Six-Alarm Fire in Allentown
  • Woodforest Acceptance Solutions and AlpacaBOSS Launch Partnership
  • Ricci's Painting & Contracting Expands Home Transformation Services
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper Recently Announced New Steps to Eliminate Four-Year Degree Requirements for State Government Jobs, President Obama Calls Eliminating Degree Requirements "Smart Policy"

HARRISBURG, PA –Governor Josh Shapiro continues to lead the way on opening the doors of opportunity to more people and eliminating unnecessary college degree requirements to fill jobs. Last week, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper announced he would be eliminating four-year degree requirements for most state government jobs, joining Georgia's state legislature and the Governor of Alaska after Governor Shapiro announced a similar policy on his first full day in office.

Governor Shapiro was one of the first governors to take action to remove degree requirements, along with the governors of Maryland, Colorado, and Utah, who have implemented similar policies. Recently, Vox praised the governors' action on this issue in an article outlining why eliminating college degree requirements is the right thing to do.

Former President Barack Obama also lauded Governor Shapiro and the other leaders for implementing "smart policy," and encouraged other states to follow suit.

https://twitter.com/BarackObama/status/16375749..." rel="nofollow">Read more about how other states are following the Governor's lead to eliminate barriers to employment below

More on The PennZone
  • Fig Lehigh Valley Celebrates 50th Edition With Summer Launch Party at the Americus Hotel
  • Make America French Again Launches National Campaign
  • RAS AP Consulting Expands AP Governance & Automation Practice and Named Finalist for Heidelberg Materials SAP Vendor & Customer Data Project
  • New Children's Book Teaches Kids the Lesson Its Author Spent a Career Learning: Your Worth Doesn't Need Permission
  • Proper Sky Named to the 2026 MSP 501

Vox: Stop requiring college degrees for jobs that don't need them

When President Joe Biden recently touted the hundreds of billions of dollars invested into American manufacturing in the last two years, he included a talking point that previous Democratic presidents might not have bragged about. New factories in Ohio, he said, could offer thousands of "jobs paying $130,000 a year, and many don't require a college degree."

When Biden highlighted those non-college jobs at the State of the Union, it was just three weeks after Pennsylvania's new Democratic governor Josh Shapiro eliminated the requirement of a four-year college degree for the bulk of jobs in Pennsylvania state's government, two months after Utah's Republican governor Spencer Cox did the same, and nearly one year after Maryland's Republican governor Larry Hogan set off the trend. Since the president's State of the Union, Alaska's Republican governor Mike Dunleavy has also followed suit.

Maryland's newly elected Democratic governor, Wes Moore, plans to continue opening up state jobs to non-college-educated workers, confirmed his spokesperson.

For liberal politicians like Moore, Shapiro, and Biden, promoting policies to help the more than 70 million American workers who never graduated from college is rooted partly in politics, as Democrats have struggled recently to earn support from non-college-educated voters, especially men. After decades of prioritizing college attendance, the Democratic Party has been scrambling to figure out how to change the widespread perception that its leaders are out of touch with the struggles of average people.

But the announcements we've seen haven't just come from Democrats looking to appeal to voters or just from elected officials. And they're not even mere reactions to the heightened competition for workers, though that's part of it.

The moves are the result of a concerted effort, backed by staggering research and a multi-million-dollar advertising campaign, to educate employers on broken hiring practices that have needlessly locked two-thirds of the workforce out of higher-paying American jobs. For decades, more and more job postings have reflexively required college degrees. Now it's finally being recognized this was a mistake.

[…]

The hard work is starting to pay off. Earlier this year, the New York Times editorial board published a piece that praised the work of companies like IBM and governors like Josh Shapiro for expanding their hiring practices to include individuals without college diplomas. "Making college more affordable is important, but there are other keys to the doors of opportunity as well," they wrote.

More on The PennZone
  • 100+ Episodes In, Liftoff with Keith Newman Tells Founders to Stop Publishing More
  • Vierra Communities Adds Operations of Two Skilled Nursing Facilities in the DC Metro Area
  • Slotozilla Introduces a Centralized Resource for World Cup Bonus Offers
  • Webinar Announcement: Built for Trust: Latitude's 0 to 1 Compliance Playbook for Modern Cross-Border Payments
  • OneVizion Names AI Leader Matthew Kirk as Chief Operating Officer to Drive Governed AI Across Telecom and Electric Utilities

Last year, researchers from Harvard Business School and the Burning Glass Institute found evidence of what they called "an emerging degree reset" in hiring. By analyzing over 51 million job postings dating back to 2014, the researchers found that between 2017 and 2019 roughly 46 percent of "middle-skill" and 37 percent of "high-skill" occupations no longer asked for a bachelor's degree, and instead had job postings listing technical and social skills instead. The report concluded that based on the trends they were observing, an additional 1.4 million jobs could open to workers without college degrees in the next five years.

"Jobs do not require four-year college degrees," the report's authors wrote. "Employers do."

Getting more employers to rethink their degree requirements will take hard work. Rosenblum, of Grads of Life, said one of the biggest barriers is just changing mindsets. "Employers have grown up in a system where the four-year degree is the proxy and there's a perception that it's risky to do something different," she said.

So far, there is no perfect, universal alternative assessment to identify the professional skills employers have previously relied on a Bachelor's degree to signal. But Rosenblum and Ahmed from Opportunity@Work say there's a lot of work happening right now to develop those tools, such as creating micro-credentials for individual industries. Software developers reflect a good example of an industry that has embraced new hiring practices, partly because employers have found other ways to verify the quality of someone's coding skills, making college degrees less relevant. The challenge is finding out how to create comparable assessments for other fields.

Ahmed said there's still a lot of work to do to get managers to realize that STARs are half of the talent pool. "Many just do not know, we're all in our own cocoons," he said.

New data released this month suggests employers are hiring at a slower rate, and economists still warn of a possible recession this year as inflation persists. Advocates for hiring workers without college degrees say it's critical that employers don't revert to the same flawed hiring proxies they adopted following the last big economic downturn.

"I do have frankly a lot of concern," said Rosenblum. "We're having a lot of change in our labor market, things are weakening, and we're seeing companies doing hiring freezes and layoffs. We're spending a lot of time talking with business leaders about the need to make sure we don't go back to what happened in the 2008 recession."

Contact:ra-gvgovpress@pa.gov

###

SHARE Email Facebook Twitter

Filed Under: Government, State

Show All News | Disclaimer | Report Violation
0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on The PennZone
  • eCopier Solutions Surpasses 3,000 Five-Star Google Reviews and Maintains Perfect Five-Star Rating
  • Creative Investment Research Welcomes Supreme Court Decision Protecting Federal Reserve Independence While Calling for Continued Accountability
  • Rebecca Francis Team Ranks Among Top 1.5% of Teams and Agents Nationwide
  • Ascent Solar Technologies (N A S D A Q: ASTI): Positioned at the Intersection of the New Space Economy, Defense Innovation and Next-Generation Energy
  • Triple-Digit Growth, Stock Market Upgrade plus a Rapidly Expanding Specialty Healthcare Platform: Cardiff Lexington Corporation (Stock Symbol: CDIX)
  • Morrisville & Cary Education Centers Honored with National Award
  • AI-Powered Neuropsychiatry, FDA Regulatory Momentum, Commercial Ketamine Launch Position NRx Pharmaceuticals for Potential Breakout Growth in 2026
  • Henri-Lloyd Launches Sail Free to Break Down Barriers to Sailing
  • Genuine Hospitality, LLC Selected to Operate Hilton Garden Inn Jacksonville JTB/Deerwood Park
  • Destination Niagara Launches Game Changing Digital Magazine Redefining How Visitors Experience Niagara Falls
  • Val Market is the New Frontier of the Online Marketplace
  • San Diego's newest marketing firm is boring on purpose — it's working
  • Arizona Christian Homeschools Launches Statewide Directory
  • LKPFM Corporation Canada the importance
  • Sexually Abused in a Psychiatric Hospital or Psychiatrist's or Psychologist's Office? CCHR Urges Survivors to Reach Out to It
  • Ten Ten Ten Announces Free Value-Based Care Playbook for Independent Primary Care Practices
  • Senco Home Services Expands Residential Construction Services
  • Ricci's Painting & Contracting Expands Home Transformation Services
  • United Way and Community Partners Launch Relief Fund to Support Victims of the Six-Alarm Fire in Allentown
  • Sylvester Anthony III Introduces His Artist Journey with Debut Single "Cherish"

Popular on PennZone

  • Kevin Francis Design Introduces CHROMA, a Collection of Saturated Solid Color Wool Rugs - 215
  • Agape Leadership Academy Opens Nationwide Enrollment — State ESA Scholarships Cover Full Tuition for Families in 7 States
  • Eichelberger Performing Arts Center Announces Fall 2026 Performance Lineup
  • From Broken to Soaring Week 40
  • Dave's Auto Services Sponsors Night of Racing at Action Track USA in Kutztown PA
  • NRE Health Institute Launches International Study Examining Motivations Behind Non-Sexual Nudity
  • A Foundational Claim in Human Secrecy Goes Public
  • Greensburg Pennsylvania Martial Arts School Racks Up BJJ Wins
  • Fourth Annual Free Training Day Mid-Atlantic Returns Sept. 19, 2026
  • Finnish Political Satire Film Generates 10,000+ Cross-Platform Interactions Following Gandalf Parody Video Across TikTok, YouTube and Telegram

Similar on PennZone

  • Kasinohai Audit: Most Slots Could Be Affected by Finland's Draft Gambling Rules
  • Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
  • Sexually Abused in a Psychiatric Hospital or Psychiatrist's or Psychologist's Office? CCHR Urges Survivors to Reach Out to It
  • Boston Industrial Solutions Introduces High-Performance Primer for Bonding Liquid Silicone to Epoxy
  • Verbica Challenges Panetta to a Televised Debate on the Issues
  • George Martinez Completes Community Re-distribution Initiative, Returning $5,000 In Campaign Resources To Anchorage Nonprofits
  • Psychiatric Hospitals Fail to Warn Electroshock Patients of FDA-Cited Risks in Estimated $7 Billion Industry
  • George Martinez Launches Community Re-distribution Initiative With Donation to the Gamma Alpha Alpha Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc
  • Inframark–Slater Joint Venture Selected to Manage Fulton County Wastewater Operations
  • CAPHRA: Australia and Thailand show nicotine prohibition fuels illicit markets
Copyright © The PennZone | Theme: OMag by LilyTurf Themes
  • Contribute
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us