Published on October 29, 2025

John A. Logan College has been named one of the top 200 community colleges in the nation eligible to apply for the 2027 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, the most prestigious recognition of high achievement and performance among America’s community colleges. This marks the first time the College has been named a finalist.
The Aspen Prize, awarded every two years since 2010, recognizes colleges that demonstrate outstanding outcomes in student success—measured by retention, completion, transfer, and bachelor’s degree attainment. Of the nation’s 1,167 community colleges, only 200 were selected based on rigorous analysis of student outcomes data.
“This recognition is all about the people at John A. Logan College,” said JALC President Dr. Kirk Overstreet. “Our faculty and staff have done incredible work in difficult times. Their dedication to recruitment, retention, and improving our internal processes has led to significant gains in both enrollment and graduation rates.”
Together, the 200 eligible institutions reflect the diversity and strength of America’s community colleges—ranging from large urban campuses to small rural institutions, serving from hundreds to tens of thousands of students. Each plays a vital role in workforce preparation, transfer education, and community development.
“The Aspen Prize rewards colleges that achieve the kind of outcomes that actually matter to students—completing college degree programs that lead to lifelong success,” said Josh Wyner, executive director of the Aspen Institute College Excellence Program. “Aspen Prize winners offer a powerful message: Community colleges can deliver the kind of life-changing education that makes the American Dream real.”
Community colleges educate nearly six million students nationwide. Yet, outcomes in graduation and post-graduation success often vary widely. The Aspen Prize process identifies and celebrates colleges that achieve strong and improving results, providing a model for others to emulate.
The 200 eligible colleges have been invited to submit detailed applications for further review. Over the next 20 months, Aspen evaluators will assess data on transfer and completion rates, graduate
employment and earnings, and evidence of effective, equity-focused practices. The 2027 Aspen Prize winner will be announced in spring 2027.
“Among these 200 colleges are some really special places that deliver strong and improving outcomes for students across the board,” Wyner said. “Our job now is to identify those that truly stand out and shine a spotlight on the strategies that others can replicate.”
This marks the first time in the award’s history that 200 colleges are eligible to apply, expanded from 150 in previous cycles. This year’s selection process also incorporated National Student Clearinghouse data, enabling a more comprehensive review of degree completion, transfer, and bachelor’s attainment rates among both full- and part-time students.
Provost Dr. Stephanie Chaney Hartford underscored the academic and student-support progress driving JALC’s results. “We’ve simplified pathways, invested in high-impact teaching, and expanded holistic supports—from advising and tutoring to transfer and workforce partnerships,” Hartford said. “When you remove barriers and keep students connected, they finish what they start—and they thrive.”
The recognition comes amid a period of transformational growth at John A. Logan College. In August, the College broke ground on a state-of-the-art Career and Technical Education Center, funded in part by a grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration.
“This facility will completely transform and modernize our Career and Technical teaching and training abilities,” Overstreet said. “It will provide state-of-the-art tools and hands-on opportunities that strengthen both our workforce and the economic future of southern Illinois.”
Located adjacent to the current H Building, the new CTE Center will include a modern welding lab, upgraded automotive and HVAC facilities, and expanded classroom space—creating a hub for high-demand technical training aligned with industry needs.
The College is also investing heavily in healthcare education. A federal grant will allow JALC to expand its nursing program by completing the fourth floor of the Communications Wing, complementing a recent remodel of the ground floor, which now houses the Surgical Technology and Medical Laboratory Technology programs.
“Our healthcare programs are vital to southern Illinois,” said Overstreet. “This expansion not only benefits our students as they prepare for their careers but also strengthens the healthcare infrastructure of our entire region.”
In addition, JALC has launched an innovative Promise Scholarship Program designed to provide last-dollar scholarships for in-district high school students, enabling them to attend John A. Logan College tuition-free beginning in Fall 2030.
Students who meet academic and attendance requirements, complete dual-credit coursework, and finish the College 101 course will be eligible to attend JALC at no cost, dramatically reducing financial barriers to higher education.
With modern facilities, forward-thinking leadership, and a laser focus on student success, John A. Logan College continues to prepare not just students for the next step—but an entire region for the next generation.