Title: Articulation
1Articulation Transfer Updates
- Ohio Transfer Council Conference
- May 30, 2008
2 Course Equivalency
Career-Technical Credit Transfer (CT2)
Transfer Assurance Guides (TAGs)
Course Equivalency Management System (CEMS)
Advanced Placement (AP) Policy
The University System of Ohio
Transfer Research Findings
3Contact Information
- Paula Compton
- Director, Articulation Transfer
- Ohio Board of Regents
- (614) 466-3334
- pcompton_at_regents.state.oh.us
- Candice Grant
- Administrator, Articulation Transfer
- Ohio Board of Regents
- (614) 644-0642
- cgrant_at_regents.state.oh.us
4Five Steps to Course Equivalency
- Defining Joint faculty panels meet to define
learning outcomes and credit hour ranges. - Agreeing Educational partners reach consensual
agreement on the learning outcomes via a
statewide feedback process. - Matching Institutions match courses to learning
outcomes and credit hour ranges. - Submitting Institutions submit specific course
materials based on learning outcomes and credit
hours. - Reviewing Faculty review panels validate course
materials against learning outcomes, recommended
credit hour ranges, and other requirements.
5What is a match?
- A match is a set of one or more courses in a
subject area that are grouped together as meeting
a specific set of learning outcomes, recommended
credit hour ranges, and other requirements,
represented by a corresponding Ohio Articulation
Number (OAN). - An OAN is simply a naming convention used to
uniquely identify each set of learning outcomes.
Because Ohio does not have a common course
numbering system, OANs were created instead to
act as connectors.
6Who approves matches?
- Faculty panels have been formed based on
nominations from both two- and four-year
institutions. - These panels consist of faculty members from
across the state who have been chosen to
represent their discipline. - It is these panel members who make the decisions
regarding whether or not a match should be
approved.
7What qualifies a match for approval?
- The match must meet 70 (or in some cases 100)
of the learning outcomes - Credit hours should be taken into account as well
because they are commonly viewed as an indicator
of breadth and depth. - The match must also meet any other requirements
including co-/prerequisite, laboratory hours,
and textbooks.
8What is an equivalency?
- An equivalency exists when a match is approved as
meeting a specific set of learning outcomes,
identified by an OAN. If two institutions have
approved matches to the same set of learning
outcomes (and both approvals are effective in the
same time period), the matches are equivalent.
9Examples of Equivalency
Equivalency
Approved Match
Approved Match
Course 1
OAN001
Course A
10Examples of Equivalency, cont.
Equivalency
Approved Match
Approved Match
Course A
Course 1
OAN002
Course B
Course 2
11Examples of Equivalency, cont.
Equivalency
Approved Match
Approved Match
Course A
Course 1
OAN002
Course B
12What if there is no equivalency?
- Sometimes, a school will either not have a course
that would fulfill a specific OAN or their course
has not yet been approved. - If this does occur, any student who has completed
an approved match to the OAN is guaranteed to
receive credit in the major for the completed
coursework. How that credit applies to the major
is up to the receiving institution.
13How can equivalencies be viewed?
- The TAG Approved Courses Bulletin Board displays
all approved matches - http//regents.ohio.gov/transfer/tagcourses
- It is able to display approved matches by
institution or the course equivalencies that
exist between institutions. - The Bulletin Board does not display not approved
matches or bilateral agreements.
14Bulletin Board Example
15Example, continued
16CT2 Update
- Statewide launch of the initiative
- Five Regional Validation Centers (Connected to
Economic Development Regions) - Marion Technical College (Information Technology
Networking) - Miami University Hamilton Campus (Engineering
Technology) - Owens Community College (Automotive Technology)
- Sinclair Community College (Practical Nursing)
- The University of Akron (Medical Assisting)
17CT2 Update, continued
- CTAG Coordinators have been identified for all
institutions involved in the initiative - Training and technical support for the electronic
Course Equivalency Management System is being
provided through the Validation Centers - Institutions are now able to submit courses via
CEMS - Validation centers will focus on the review of
these submissions over the next month
18CT2 Update, continued
- Five current technical areas
- Automotive Technology
- Engineering Technology (Electrical Mechanical)
- Information Technology Networking
- Medical Assisting
- Practical Nursing
- Expansion to new technical areas
- Fire Science/EMT
- Other IT-related areas
19TAGs Update
- Extensive Approved Course Audit
- Problem TAGs/OANs
- Nursing
- Dance
- Engineering Technologies
- English Literature
- Health Information Management
- Medical Laboratory
20TAGs Update, continued
- Last date for submissions was May 1
- Final round of reviewing will conclude June 2
- Institutions will be notified of their progress
on June 6 and asked to provide reasons for any
outstanding, not approved courses by the end of
the month
21TAGs Update, continued
- TAG Coordinators are scheduled to be trained on
how to use the Course Equivalency Management
System (CEMS) in June - Faculty Review Panels are being re-formed
- Those selected to serve on the faculty panels
will receive training on CEMS in the fall
22Course Equivalency Management System (CEMS)
CEMS is a Web-based tool that supports
course/program submission, review, and posting of
equivalent courses/programs.
23Another Five Step Process
- Inventory Creation Performed by Content Experts
at the Institution - Match Creation Performed by Content Experts at
the Institution - Submission Executed by TAG Contacts at the
Schools - Review Performed by the Validation Center
Coordinator and/or Faculty Review Panels - Posting Performed by Software Under Control of
Validation Center Coordinators
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26Example of Course Inventory
27Example of Course Inventory, continued
28Match Creation
All three slides combined are what a
course/program submission contains.
29Advanced Placement (AP) Policy
- A score of 3 or higher will provide credit at any
PIOHE in Ohio. The credit must count towards
graduation and will meet a general education
requirement if the course to which the AP credit
is equivalent fulfils a requirement at the
receiving institution. - When it clearly enhances the opportunity for
student success, an institution should strongly
advise that an AP score of at least a 4 is needed
for a student to be successful in a second course
in a highly dependent sequence of courses in a
STEM area. For example, an advisor should
strongly recommend that an AP score of at least a
4 is needed on the AP Chemistry exam in order
for the student to be successful in the second
course in Chemistry.
30AP Policy, continued
- A score or 3 or higher on an AP exam in a foreign
language area will provide credit for at least
the first year of foreign language at any PIOHE. - Each PIOHE in Ohio will provide information on
awarding AP credits, which should include the
number of credits awarded and the course
equivalents earned for scores of 3 or higher. - Credits earned via AP exams are transferable
within PIOHE in Ohio according to the states
transfer module and transfer policy.
31Timeline for Implementation
- The policy will be fully implemented by fall
2009, and will be applied to students who are
enrolled at a PIOHE in the fall 2009 and have not
had their AP scores evaluated for college credit - The new policy will be communicated to
prospective students and to others key
stakeholders during the 2008-9 academic year -
- An implementation committee is being formed to
address any issues with the policy and to develop
the communication plan
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33Goal of the 10-Year Plan
- To raise the educational attainment of our state
each year, and to close the gap between Ohio and
competitor states and nations.
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35University System of Ohio
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37University System of Ohio Goals
- Graduate more students
- Ohio is ranked 38th in associates or higher
- 37th in bachelors degrees or higher
- 29th in graduate/professional degrees
- Keep more of our graduates in Ohio
- 66 live in Ohio after graduation
- Attract more degree holders from out of state
- Who leaves and who stays, and why?
38Overall Strategies
- Collaboration, not competition
- Centers of Excellence
- More opportunities, higher quality and lower
cost, close to home - System differentiation
- Different missions, different structures, same
overall goal - Flexible delivery and more options
- Increasing access and improving college readiness
- Seniors to Sophomores
- Bachelors degree within 30 miles of every Ohioan
39Overall Strategies
- Technology infrastructure
- Industry supply and demand
- Ohio Skills Bank
- Engagement with private colleges and universities
- Accountability goals and measures tracking
progress - Twenty measurements of success
40Guaranteed Transfer
- Inform students in advance about courses and
programs needed - and eligibility fortransfer.
41Electronic Transcript
- The Ohio Board of Regents and the Ohio Department
of Education will work collaboratively to develop
an electronic transcript which will follow the
student throughout his/her career - Integrated technology will enable a variety of
services to allow students and parents to gain
access to important information and communicate
with appropriate organizations
42Several Ways Independent Colleges Can Partner
- Refine and develop credit transfer agreements
- Offer and improve two-plus-two articulation
agreements - Educate adults for lifelong careers (counselors
and admissions staff included!) - Work toward appropriate financial incentives to
participate and serve Ohios high school graduates
43For more information and a copy of the full plan
http//www.regents.ohio.gov
44Experiences of Ohio Transfer Students
- A report of The Ohio Collaborative
- Commissioned by
- The Ohio Board of Regents
- Authored by
- Cynthia K. Buettner, Ph.D.
- Jessica Beauvais, M.A.
45Design
- Online survey
- 20 geographically stratified state supported two
and four year institutions - Currently enrolled students who had transferred
credit from another institution - Currently enrolled students who had requested a
transcript be sent to another institution (at 4
year - In depth phone interviews (n12)
46Survey
- Quantitative and open ended questions
- Three Sections
- College information and transfer status
- Transfer experiences, reasons, resources used,
counseling services, barriers encountered - Demographics
- Fielded November 2007
47Results Transfer Status
- 5519 Respondents
- 96 transferred at least 2 times
- No significant differences in motivations for
college enrollment.
48Results Transfer Motivations
- Reasons for Transfer
- Academic Advancement
- Academic Challenges
- Financial Issues
- Context Issues
- Personal Challenges and Choices
- Undefined
49Results Use of Resources
- Use of online tools
- CT 66.7
- PT 61.6
- NCT 58
- Use of CAS
- CT 41.5
- PT 45.0
- NCT 35
- Usefulness of CAS
- CT 68.6
- PT 57.5
- NCT 65.8
- Use of paper tools
- CT 41.8
- PT 53.9
- NCT 22
- Usefulness of paper tools
- CT 69.6
- PT 75.7
- NCT 39.4
50Results Institutionally Based Help
51Results Transferred Coursework
- 26.7 CT were able to use more than 90
- 58.7 CT were able to use more than 70
- 47.54 CT more than expected
52Results Barriers to Transfer
- CT and PT students
- Course transferability
- Financial
- Communication and accurate information
- Personal
- No barriers
- NCT Reasons for not -in addition to above
- Financial financial aid scholarship packages
- Resolution of issues
- Developed friends, grew to like being in school
and/or the particular institution
53Results Suggested Improvements
- Improved transfer of credits
- Increased information
- More access to and better counseling
- Enhanced technology online transcript requests
- Portability of scholarships and financial aid
- Improvements to CAS and better marketing of CAS
- Central website that contains transfer policies
for all Ohio schools - Additional services (mentoring) for first
generation students