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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Rise and Fall of Connecticut's Push for 90-Credit Bachelor's Degrees
In a landscape where higher education costs continue to climb and students seek faster paths to the workforce, Connecticut's recent legislative attempt to introduce accelerated three-year bachelor's degrees has ended in disappointment. Senate Bill 396, aimed at permitting institutions across the state to offer bachelor's programs requiring just 90 credit hours instead of the traditional 120, quietly died in the Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee last week.
The standard bachelor's degree in the United States typically demands 120 credit hours, spread over four years of full-time study. A 90-credit program, by contrast, compresses this into three years, potentially saving students tens of thousands in tuition and accelerating their entry into professional roles. Proponents viewed this as a pragmatic response to economic pressures, but skeptics raised alarms about quality dilution and market confusion.
Unpacking Senate Bill 396: What It Proposed
Senate Bill 396, introduced during the 2026 session of the Connecticut General Assembly, sought to amend state statutes governing higher education. Specifically, it would have authorized both public and private institutions of higher education—defined as accredited colleges and universities offering bachelor's degrees—to develop and seek approval for new bachelor's degree programs totaling only 90 semester credit hours. Approval would come from the Office of Higher Education (OHE), Connecticut's regulatory body overseeing postsecondary institutions, ensuring alignment with accreditation standards from bodies like the New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE).
Key provisions included mandatory reporting on program outcomes, such as graduation rates, employment placement, and student debt levels, to be submitted annually to the OHE. The bill did not mandate widespread adoption but opened the door for voluntary pilots, with an effective date of July 1, 2026. Institutions would need to demonstrate that these accelerated programs maintained rigorous academic standards, often by focusing on career-aligned majors like nursing, business, or information technology, where competencies could be achieved efficiently.
This approach mirrored frameworks from regional accreditors, which permit reduced-credit pilots provided they include safeguards like distinct program naming—such as "accelerated bachelor's" or "applied bachelor's"—to differentiate from traditional degrees.
Voices in Favor: Affordability, Workforce Needs, and Competitive Edge
Support for SB 396 came from a coalition of independent colleges, universities, and industry groups. Jennifer Widness, president of the Connecticut Conference of Independent Colleges (CCIC), testified that about half of CCIC's member institutions were interested in launching such programs. She highlighted how neighboring New England states—Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island—already host institutions offering 90-credit options, positioning Connecticut at a disadvantage in attracting ambitious students.
Quinnipiac University Provost Debra Liebowitz emphasized a cautious rollout, noting the university's commitment to pathways for 90-credit graduates to pursue additional credits if needed for graduate school or advanced certifications. Eastern Connecticut State University and Mitchell College also voiced strong support, citing potential savings of up to $30,000-$50,000 per student based on average in-state tuition rates around $12,000 annually.
The Connecticut Hospital Association added urgency, arguing that accelerated degrees in healthcare fields could address critical shortages. With Connecticut facing a projected deficit of 10,000 nurses by 2030 amid aging demographics, faster training pipelines were seen as essential. Rep. Seth Bronko, the Republican ranking member of the committee, lamented the bill's demise, predicting bipartisan revival next session to tackle rising student debt—averaging $35,000 for Connecticut bachelor's recipients—and stagnant enrollment trends.
- Cost savings: Up to 25% reduction in tuition and fees.
- Time to workforce: One year earlier entry, boosting lifetime earnings.
- Enrollment boost: Appeals to non-traditional students balancing work and family.
Opposition Mounts: Quality, Recognition, and Long-Term Risks
Nearly 30 faculty members, including chapters of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), submitted testimony against the bill. Prof. Andrew Smyth of Southern Connecticut State University warned of a "race to the bottom," where institutions slash electives and general education to cut credits, eroding the liberal arts foundation essential for adaptable professionals. History professor Wynn Gadkar Wilcox of Western Connecticut State University, interim AAUP chapter president, echoed this, arguing that reduced breadth hampers preparation for a dynamic job market.
Committee co-chairs Sen. Derek Slap (D) and Rep. Greg Haddad (D) cited insufficient safeguards. Slap posed critical questions: Would employers equate a 90-credit degree to a full bachelor's? Would graduate programs accept it? Could it meet licensure for professions like teaching or engineering? Haddad insisted future versions ban "bachelor's" from titles to prevent misleading students. Critics feared a two-tiered system, where elite schools maintain prestige via four-year programs while others dilute standards.
The Committee's Decision: A Cautious Hold
On March 18, 2026, the Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee opted not to advance SB 396, effectively killing it for the session. Democratic leaders, holding majority sway, prioritized unresolved issues over innovation. Haddad noted openness to reintroduction with robust guardrails, such as OHE-mandated pilots limited to five programs per institution and independent quality audits.
This mirrors broader Connecticut higher education debates, where enrollment at public flagships like UConn has grown modestly (2,768 undergraduates from 2016-2026), but private colleges grapple with demographic cliffs and $1.5 billion in statewide student debt.
National Momentum for Three-Year Degrees
Connecticut's stall contrasts with nationwide acceleration. Over 60 U.S. institutions now offer or plan 90-credit bachelor's, per the College-in-3 Exchange. Indiana's 2024 law mandates public universities develop at least one such program by 2026. Massachusetts' Board of Higher Education approved pilot pathways in February 2026, targeting affordability amid 6% tuition hikes at peers like UMass.
Accreditors like NECHE facilitate this via experimental pilots, often in high-demand fields. Brigham Young University-Idaho launched the first fully online version in 2024, with early data showing comparable outcomes. Utah aggressively promotes them statewide. For more on national developments, see detailed analysis from Inside Higher Ed.
New England Comparisons: Connecticut Lags Behind
While Vermont shows disinterest, Connecticut joins it as the outlier in New England. Massachusetts institutions like UMass Boston pilot nursing tracks at 90 credits. New Hampshire's Southern New Hampshire University, a distance leader, offers competency-based alternatives. Rhode Island College and Maine's University of Southern Maine have approved programs, drawing cross-border students and pressuring Connecticut's 30+ independents.
| State | Status | Example Institutions |
|---|---|---|
| Massachusetts | Pilots Approved 2026 | UMass, state colleges |
| Indiana | Mandated | Public universities |
| Connecticut | Failed 2026 | None yet |
Broader Impacts on Students, Faculty, and Institutions
For students, rejection means continued high costs—Connecticut public tuition averages $13,000/year in-state—exacerbating debt that burdens 70% of graduates. Faculty worry about workload intensification to compress content. Institutions face enrollment drops; Connecticut's privates saw 5% declines since 2020 amid competition.
Workforce implications loom large: Healthcare, IT sectors need 15,000 more bachelor's holders by 2030. Without acceleration, pathways like community college transfers or prior learning credits remain primary alternatives.
Alternatives and Pathways Forward
Optimists like Madeleine Green of College-in-3 Exchange remain hopeful: "Innovations do not always succeed on the first attempt."
Next steps: Revived bill with naming restrictions, outcome metrics, and equity focus. For full bill text, visit the Connecticut General Assembly site. Policymakers could study Massachusetts' model, balancing innovation with safeguards.
- Prior learning assessments for workforce entrants.
- Expanded guaranteed transfer agreements with community colleges.
- State incentives for high-outcome pilots.
Looking Ahead: Reshaping Connecticut Higher Education
As demographic headwinds and AI disruptions reshape jobs, Connecticut must weigh agility against tradition. Failed SB 396 underscores tensions but sparks dialogue on sustainable affordability. With committee leaders open to iteration, 2027 could bring refined legislation, positioning Nutmeg State colleges as leaders in accessible excellence. Stakeholders—from students to employers—await outcomes that prioritize both speed and substance.