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Improving Student Learning through Student Engagement January 18, 2006

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Students' involvement or engagement proves to be central to ... group, aspiring to make sure all. subgroups engage in their. education at similarly high levels. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Improving Student Learning through Student Engagement January 18, 2006


1
Improving Student Learning through Student
Engagement January 18, 2006
  • Community College Survey of Student Engagement
    2004 Findings

2
Student Engagement
  • The research is unequivocal students who are
    actively involved in both academic and
    out-of-class activities gain more from the
    college experience than those who are not so
    involved.
  • Ernest T. Pascarella
  • Patrick T. Terenzini,
  • How College
  • Affects Students

3
Student Engagement
  • Students involvement or engagement proves to be
    central to both persistence and learning. Even
    among students who persist, those who are more
    involved show greater learning gain.
  • Vincent Tinto
  • CCSSE Workshop 2005

4
The Solution Engagement By Design
  • Community college students challenges do not
    make student engagement impossible. They do mean
    it must be intentional. It must happen by design.

5
Benchmarks for Effective Educational Practice
  • CCSSE reports survey results in two ways
    national benchmarks areas that educational
    research has shown to be important in quality
    educational practice and students responses to
    individual survey items. The five benchmarks are
  • Active and Collaborative Learning
  • Student Effort
  • Academic Challenge
  • Student-Faculty Interaction
  • Support for Learners

CCSSEville Community College 2004 Benchmark Scores
6
Reaching for Excellence
  • CCSSE encourages colleges continually to ask
    whether current performance is good enough and to
    reach for excellence in student engagement.
    Colleges can
  • 1. Compare themselves to the national average
    (the 50 mark).
  • 2. Compare themselves to high-performing
    colleges.
  • 3. Measure their overall performance against
    results for their least-engaged group, aspiring
    to make sure allsubgroups engage in their
    education at similarly high levels.
  • 4. Gauge their work in areas their college
    strongly values.
  • 5. Contrast where they are now with where they
    want to be.

CCSSEville Community College 2004 Benchmark Scores
50--
7
Reaching for Excellence 2004 CCSSE Benchmark
Scores
2004 Colleges
8
Active and Collaborative Learning
  • Students learn more when they are actively
    involved in their education and have
    opportunities to think about and apply what they
    are learning in different settings.

9
Active and Collaborative Learning
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Students Who Collaborated
10
Active and Collaborative Learning
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Students Who Collaborated
11
Student Effort
  • Students behaviors contribute significantly to
    their learning and the likelihood that they will
    attain their educational goals.

12
Student Effort
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Hours Full-Time Students Spend Studying
2 - MC
18 - MC
20 - MC
61 - MC
13
Student Effort
Students Who Come to Class Unprepared
22 - MC
78 - MC
14
Academic Challenge
  • Challenging intellectual and creative work is
    central to student learning and collegiate
    quality.

15
Academic Challenge
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Are Students Writing Enough?
Are Students Reading Enough?
27 - MC 24 - MD
26 - MC 29 - MD
16
Student-Faculty Interaction
  • In general, the more interaction students have
    with their teachers, the more likely they are to
    learn effectively and persist toward achievement
    of their educational goals.

17
Student-Faculty Interaction
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Students Who Talked with Advisors or Instructors
about Career Plans
20 - MC 21 - MD
38 - MC 33 - MD
18
Student-Faculty Interaction
Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges Students
Who Discussed Ideas with Instructors Outside of
Class
14 - MC 14 - MD
43 - MC 49 - MD
19
Support for Learners
  • Students perform better and are more satisfied at
    colleges that are committed to their success and
    cultivate positive working and social
    relationships among different groups on campus.

20
Support for Learners
  • Key Findings All CCSSE 2004 colleges

Students Views of Academic and Student Support
Services
69 - MC 72 - MD
Percentage of students who say their college
provides the support they need to succeed
either quite a bit or very much.
21
The Need for Inescapable Engagement
Students Who Earn Degrees
Students Who Transfer
22
The Need for Inescapable Engagement
Students Plans after the Current Semester
When do you plan to take classes at this college
again?
20 - MC 15 - MD
20 - MC 12 - MD
6 - MC 6 - MD
55 - MC 68 - MD
23
Strategy 1 Engage Early, Engage Often
CCSSE Respondents by Credit Hours Earned at the
College
38.8
18.1
14.8
13.2
10.7
4.3
MC are in red font
24
The Best of Times, The Worst of Times The Front
Door of College
  • Question
  • What are your incoming students experiences when
    they first meet your college?

25
Focus on the Front Door
  • Question
  • If we were to redesign students college
    experience from the moment of first contact with
    the college through to completion of 15 credit
    hours, what should be the key elements for that
    experience?

26
Focus on the Front Door
  • What does the evidence suggest?
  • HIGH EXPECTATIONS
  • REQUIRED ORIENTATION
  • COLLEGE SUCCESS COURSE
  • LEARNING COMMUNITIES
  • EARLY AND FREQUENT FEEDBACK
  • TUTORING/SUPPLEMENTAL INSTRUCTION
  • EARLY ALERT SYSTEMS

27
Strategy 2 Stress Academic Advising
Students Use of Academic Advising/Planning
Services
14 - MC
39 - MC 37 - MD
9 - MC 12 - MD
37 - MC 43 - MD
28
Strategy in Action
Central Piedmont Community College (NC)
  • Central Piedmont Community College initiated a
    student success planning initiative entitled
    ICAN. After initial advising, students consult
    with faculty advisors who are experts in their
    field, familiar with specific courses in their
    department, and knowledgeable about educational
    and career opportunities in their areas.
  • Peer advisors, who are usually students, assist
    other students in navigating the catalog,
    preparing schedules, locating classrooms, etc.
    Finally, ICAN has developed a comprehensive
    online interactive advisement system intended to
    supplement the student/advisor relationship.
  • http//www.cpcc.cc.nc.us/

29
Strategy in Action
Valencia Community College (FL)
  • The LifeMap program at Valencia Community College
    provides developmental advising that supports
    student planning (for education, career and life)
    and aims to strengthen students self-confidence
    and decision-making skills.
  • Developmental advising refers to the process of
    making students self-sufficient. Faculty and
    staff are students advising partners, providing
    significant information and support initially.
    The expectation, however, is that as students
    gain experience, they will increasingly take the
    lead in defining and implementing their
    educational and career goals until ultimately,
    they are completely directing their own learning
    process.
  • http//valencia.cc.fl.us/
  • Emily Hooker, Learning Evidence Associate
  • ehooker_at_valenciacc.edu

30
Strategy 3 Emphasize Effective Developmental
Education
27 - MD
34 - MC
36 - MC
31 - MD
51 - MD
43 - MC
30 - MD
33 - MC
31
Strategy in Action
  • Miami-Dade College (FL)
  • has learning communities that combine
    mathematics and student life skills (SLS)
    courses. The math classes focus on math
    competencies while paying attention to study
    skills and habits. The SLS course addresses time
    management, math anxiety reduction, test-taking
    strategies, learning styles and self confidence.
    This approach leads to math retention and pass
    rates that are consistently above the norm.

http//www.mdc.edu/home/
32
Strategy 4 Redesign Educational Experiences
Collaborative Learning among Students
Interaction with Faculty Members
59 - MC
34 - MC
34 - MC
24 - MC
14 - MC
33
Strategy in Action
  • Northwest Vista College (TX)
  • New instructors participate in an extensive
    orientation each semester involving exercises on
    active and collaborative learning.
  • A full-time instructor serves as a mentor to each
    adjunct. Mentors guide new instructors to
    incorporate active learning and ASK outcomes into
    curriculum. ASK (Attitudes, Skills, and
    Knowledge) is a college-wide initiative aimed at
    providing all students with specific critical
    thinking and collaboration skills.

34
Building a Culture of Evidence
  • Better educational outcomes do not just happen.
    They depend on building and working within a
    culture of evidence
  • Being relentless about putting data in front of
    faculty and staff and using the data to promote
    positive change.
  • Being honest about current student performance to
    identify the means for improving.
  • Setting goals and implementing strategies to
    achieve them.
  • Basing every decision about programs, policies,
    budgets, and staffing on which action will have
    the best effect on student learning.

35
COMMUNITY COLLEGE FACULTY SURVEY OF STUDENT
ENGAGEMENT (CCFSSE) A FIRST LOOK
36
CCFSSE A First Look
  • In 2005, the Community College Faculty Survey of
    Student Engagement (CCFSSE) was administered for
    the first time.
  • CCFSSE
  • Elicits information from faculty about their
    teaching practices, the ways they spend their
    professional time both in and out of class, and
    their perceptions regarding students educational
    experiences.
  • Is aligned with CCSSE to allow colleges to
    contrast student and faculty perceptions.

37
CCFSSE A First Look
  • Effective Educational Practice Student and
    Faculty Responses

CCFSSE data are based on results from 39
colleges. When student (CCSSE) and faculty
(CCFSSE) views are shown side-by-side in this
presentation, the student responses include data
only from colleges that participated in the
faculty survey. It also is important to note that
while CCSSE results are expressed in terms of
benchmarks, which are created through a complex
statistical analysis and peer review, there are
no benchmarks for CCFSSE. For this presentation,
CCFSSE results are presented in groupings of
survey items that correspond to the CCSSE
benchmarks.
Source CCSSE 2005 data
38
CCFSSE A First Look
  • Student-Faculty Interaction Student
    Experiences/Faculty Perceptions

Source CCSSE 2005 data
39
The Metaphor
  • This college is like a
  • ______________.
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