Title: Engaging Community Colleges A First Look
1The CCSSE-Texas Small Colleges Consortium
Working Together to Improve Student Success
2What is CCSSE?
- The CCSSE survey
- is administered directly to community college
students during class sessions asks questions
about institutional practices and student
behaviors that are highly correlated with
student learning and retention and uses
a
sampling methodology that is consistent
across
all participating colleges.
3Background about CCSSE
- Completed 5th national administration
- 700,000 students
- 548 community colleges
- 48 states, British Columbia, Marshall Islands
4CCSSE in Texas
- 59 (82 of) Texas community and technical
colleges have participated in CCSSE (2002- 2008) - 48 of those colleges have participated more than
once
5The CCSSE-Texas Small Colleges Consortium
- For four years, The Houston Endowment Inc. has
funded the Texas Small Colleges Consortium, a
project that has supported two years of
participation for 29 Texas community colleges in
the Community College Survey of Student
Engagement (CCSSE)
6The Colleges
- Northeast Texas Community College
- Panola College
- Paris Junior College
- Ranger College
- Southwest Texas Junior College
- Temple College
- Texas State Technical College Harlingen
- Texas State Technical College Marshall
- Texas State Technical College Waco
- Texas State Technical College West Texas
- The Victoria College
- Trinity Valley College
- Vernon College
- Western Texas College
- Angelina College
- Brazosport College
- Cedar Valley College
- Clarendon College
- Coastal Bend College
- College of the Mainland
- El Centro College
- Frank Phillips College
- Galveston College
- Grayson County College
- Howard College
- Kilgore College
- Lamar Institute of Technology
- Lamar State College Orange
- Navarro College
7Continued Work
- Under a new grant from the Houston Endowment
Inc., colleges will receive a 50 grant-funded
subsidy for their continued participation in
CCSSE 2008 and 2010 or CCSSE 2009 and 2011 survey
administrations.
8Using CCSSE Results for Improvement
9Trinity Valley Community College (TVCC)
- Texas Association for Institutional Research
(TAIR)Galveston ConferenceFebruary 5, 2008 -
- Presented by Tina Rummel Director of
Institutional ResearchTrinity Valley Community
College
10About TVCC
- TVCC has campus locations in Athens, Terrell,
Kaufman and Palestine. The college has grown to
an enrollment of more than 5,800 students. - TVCCs mission statement is a learning-centered
college that provides quality academic,
workforce, and community service programs to meet
the educational needs of our students and the
citizens of our service area. - TVCC has been reaffirmed by the Southern
Association of College and Schools as of June,
2007 with no additional follow-up.
11History of TVCC CCSSE
- TVCC was selected to participate in the Texas
Small Texas College Consortium which was
supported by the Houston Endowment for 2005 and
2007 and feel very honored to have had that
opportunity. - TVCC s commitment to the results and findings of
CCSSE in 2005 and 2007 has motivated us to
continue participation in 2009 and 2011. Partial
funding has been made possible through the
(CCSSE) Texas Small Colleges Partnership. - (Continued on next slide)
12The History (continued)
- Trinity Valley Community College administered
CCSSE to over 700 students in the spring of both
2005 and 2007. - The results of the survey from 2005 revealed that
90 of the community colleges that participated
in CCSSE performed better than TVCC in four of
the five student engagement benchmark areas. - In 2005, faculty and administration were very
alarmed and concerned by the results that TVCC
received. - Since that time, TVCC has been working diligently
to improve the level of engagement with our
students.
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15TVCCs QUALITY ENHANCEMENT PLAN(QEP)
- TVCCs QEP became known as the Learning
Initiative (LI). - The LI focuses on increasing students ability to
read and write in crucial learning experiences by
enhancing student engagement. - TVCC continues to incorporate student engagement
initiatives into the LI, which was prompted by
2005 CCSSE results. - A number of activities under the leadership of
the LI have been developed since the alarming
results of the 2005 CCSSE. - The college is in its third year of the project
and has a number of pilot programs in place.
16LI Projects
- Trinity Valley Community Colleges Quality
Enhancement Plan Report, Engaged Learning
Pathways to Success, identifies four projects to
be implemented as a part of the QEP. - An Open Learning Lab
- The Learning Academy
- Discipline-Specific Reading Tests
- Student Networking Groups
17Open Learning Lab
- A central part of the LI planning is to provide a
free lab where students can receive professional
tutoring and computer-assisted learning. - The labs are designed to provide additional
tutorial help to students who have difficulty
with learning as well as a place to check email,
work on distance education classes, and have a
relaxing place to call home. - The Terrell and Palestine campuses have joined
the Athens campus in efforts to create permanent
open Learning Labs at their facilities. - Many faculty at the respective campuses have
volunteered an hour of their office time to the
lab, which has increased multi-campus awareness
and involvement. - The Learning Lab on the Athens campus has been
relocated to a larger space on the 3rd floor in
the newly opened Baugh Technology Center. - A full-time coordinator has been hired effective
Spring 2008. - The LI office will track student and faculty
involvement in the Open Learning Lab as a part of
a LI Annual Report.
18Learning Academy
- The Learning Academy is a professional
development program for faculty and staff
designed to shift the emphasis from teaching to
learning. - The idea is that a significant portion of our
faculty and staff will become graduates of the
Learning Academy, thus creating a culture where
fellow colleagues can openly talk about teaching
and learning. - A class of the Learning Academy is targeted to
include 10 to 15 faculty or staff members a
year. - The learning academys popularity has generated a
sophomore class as well as a freshman class of
faculty and staff. - On the next slide, these are the key elements
that have come out of the Learning Academy. - (Continued on next slide)
19Key Elements of the Learning Academy
- Classroom Assessment Techniques Participants
suggest at least two new classroom assessment
techniques for the group. - Instructional Design Technique Effectiveness
Participants document their own learning about
learning as a result of the reengineered learning
experience. - Project Portfolio -- Participants complete a
project portfolio designed to be at the
conclusion of their entire learning experience
for the Learning Academy. This portfolio includes
documentation of the completion of the stated
learning outcomes identified above. Due by July
15th following the spring term of class
participation, the portfolio takes numerous
forms, including a paper copy, an interactive web
portfolio, a video portfolio, or a combination of
the above. - Learning Day Participants document their
progress toward these outcomes by providing
evidence of such growth in their Project
Portfolio and by presenting the results of their
attempts to apply these concepts in their
courses. These are to be shared with the entire
campus during the Learning Day in the following
fall semester. Learning Day has been officially
added to the TVCC Calendar each fall semester.
All classes are dismissed for the day for an
intensive in-house opportunity for professional
development.
20Discipline-Specific Reading Tests
- As a result of the data collected by the
administration of the Pre-TASP (tests 01 and 02)
in fall 2005, the LI Council decided to explore
the idea of developing Discipline-Specific
Reading Tests. - The concept came at both the recommendation of
the director of the Texas Assessing Student
Learning Project as well as out of a need to
respond to faculty demands to have information on
reading which was practical and useful. - In the case of the Pre-TASP test, none of the
testing material was specific to particular
disciplines. - A major pilot for the fall 2006 semester was
built around the concept of Discipline-Specific
Reading Tests. A series of ready-to-use tests
were developed around textbook readings taken
from U.S. History, Speech, General Psychology,
Fundamentals of Nursing and Human Anatomy
Physiology. Students were asked to read a section
of each textbook and respond to questions
specific to that reading. - Tests were created in each of these courses to
measure the reading skills of the students
enrolled. - Student results on those assessments were
immediately available so faculty could quickly
recommend remediation, if needed. - Post-tests were developed and administered to
measure any reading gains. - The tests have been put online using WebCT and we
are in full swing with this process and making
improvements as we go.
21Student Networking Groups
- This concept was to teach and train faculty in
new group or team techniques and allow them to
experiment before attempting to make major
changes in course design. - With Student Networking Groups, faculty would
structure their classes to divide into working
groups that would function to foster student to
student interaction. - Teaching methods would encourage active and
collaborative learning between students while
concurrently encouraging students to take
responsibility for their learning.
22TVCCs Commitment to CCSSE
- TVCCs goal is to improve 10 deciles in 2009 and
10 deciles in 2011 on the CCSSE Benchmark
comparisons. - Although the journey to be reaffirmed has ended
for now, the goal of increased engagement will
remain a focus for TVCC as we move into the
future. - Thank you for taking the time to listen today, I
hope that you have enjoyed the presentation.
23Any Questions!!
24How Do I Find Out More?
Tina Rummel Director of Institutional
Research, Trinity Valley Community College 100
Cardinal Drive Athens, Texas 75751 (903)
675-6282 trummel_at_tvcc.edu www.tvcc.edu/institution
alresearch
25Lamar Institute of TechnologysPASS
ProgramPartnership in Achieving Student Success
Texas Association for Institutional Research
Galveston Conference February 5, 2008
Presented by Mr. David Mosley, Director
Institutional Research Planning, SACS
Accreditation Liaison
26Overview
- SACS Accreditation
- Quality Enhancement Plan
- Identification of a QEP topic
- LITs PASS Program
- College Success Skills Course
- Quality Academic Advising
- Assessment Results
- Community College Survey of Student Engagement
(CCSSE) - WorkKeys Listening, Reading for Information, and
Writing Tests - Retention Data
27SACS Accreditation Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP)
- Principles of Accreditation Foundations for
Quality Enhancement - Core Requirement 2.12 requires an institution to
develop an acceptable Quality Enhancement Plan
(QEP) and show that the plan is part of an
ongoing planning and evaluation process. Engaging
the wider academic community, the QEP is based
upon a comprehensive and thorough analysis of the
effectiveness of the learning environment for
supporting student learning and accomplishing the
mission of the institution. It is used to outline
a course of action for institutional improvement
by addressing one or more issues that contribute
to institutional quality, with special attention
to student learning. - SACS Visiting Committees expect Multiple Direct
Measures of Student Learning!
28Empirical Data (THECB)Retention Rates
Full time FTIC students who did not receive
remediation in the Fall and who returned the
following Spring
SI Similar Institutions
29What Do the Numbers Mean?
Statewide
LIT
30Establishing a Focus.
- Review of relevant research
- LIT Strategic Plan
- Empirical data (Data Resources for Institutional
Effectiveness) - Educational consultant (Noel Levitz)
- Faculty Assessment Survey
- Campus-wide Focus Groups
- Office of Student Services data
31Faculty Assessment Survey
- 30 of faculty indicated that 6 or more students
were unsuccessful in courses they taught
32What Would Help?
33Valid Percents
34Partnership in Achieving Student Success (PASS
Program)
- Mission
- The PASS program seeks to improve the quality of
student life and learning through improvements,
enhancements, or additions to the institutions
educational programs and services. (STUDENT
ENGAGEMENT) - Goal
- Design and implement a College Success Skills
Course to improve the quality of student life and
learning - Provide quality academic advisement for students
- Provide professional and paraprofessional
training to support PASS initiatives - Student Learning Assessment Measures
- Academic Advisement Survey administered to all
First-Time LIT students and to all graduating
students. - Community College Survey of Student Engagement
(CCSSE) initially administered Spring 2004
(Pre-QEP) and subsequently every two years. - ACTs WorkKeys Listening, Reading for
Information, and Writing tests administered in
the College Success Skills Course
35Assessing the PASS Program
- Principal measures
- Pre-test and Post-test (WorkKeys)
- Community College Survey of Student
Engagement (CCSSE) - Academic Advising Pre-test and Post-test
- Other measures
- Supplemental Evaluations
- Retention data
- Future measures
- Survey of Entering Student Engagement (LIT to
participate in Fall 2008) www.enteringstudent.org
36WorkKeys Data
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39- - Texas Peer Group consists of Clarendon
College, Coastal Bend College, Navarro College,
Panola College, Texas State Technical College
Marshall/Waco/West Texas, The Victoria College,
and Western Texas College.
40CCSSE Retention Index Comparison LIT vs. Texas
Peer Group
- 2004 LIT Retention Index 151.96
- 2006 LIT Retention Index 161.70 (a gain of 9.74
points or 6.4) - 2004 Texas Peer Group Retention Index 158.60
- 2006 Texas Peer Group Retention Index 159.20
- (LIT's 2006 gain over the Peer Group 2.5 points
or 1.6) - Texas Peer Group
- Clarendon College, Coastal Bend College, Navarro
College, Panola College, Texas State Technical
College Marshall/Waco/West Texas, The Victoria
College, and Western Texas College
41Active Collaborative Learning Benchmark
- In your experiences at this college during the
current school year, about how often have you
done each of the following? Asked questions in
class or contributed to class discussions - Made a class presentation.
- Worked with other students on projects during
class (Effect Size0.24) - Worked with classmates outside of class to
prepare class assignments. - Tutored or taught other students (paid or
voluntary) - Participated in a community-based project as part
of a regular course - Discussed ideas from your readings or classes
with others outside of class (students, family
members, co-workers, etc.)
- Statistically significant CCSSE Survey
Item(s) with positive Effect Size
42Student-Faculty Interaction Benchmark
- In your experiences at this college during the
current school year, about how often have you
done each of the following - Used email to communicate with an instructor.
(Effect Size -0.29) - Discussed grades or assignments with an
instructor. - Talked about career plans with an instructor or
advisor (Effect Size0.44) - Discussed ideas from your readings or classes
with instructors outside of class. - Received prompt feedback (written or oral) from
instructors on your performance. - Worked with instructors on activities other than
coursework (Effect Size0.25)
- Statistically significant CCSSE Survey
Item(s) with negative Effect Size -
Statistically significant CCSSE Survey Item(s)
with positive Effect Size
43Support for Learners Benchmark
- How much does this college emphasize each of the
following - Providing the support you need to help you
succeed at this college. - Encouraging contact among students from different
economic, social, and racial or ethnic
background. - Helping you cope with your non-academic
responsibilities (work, family, etc.) (Effect
Size0.20) - Providing the support you need to thrive
socially. (Effect Size0.24) - Providing the financial support you need to
afford your education. - Indicate how often you use the following
services - Academic advising/planning. (Effect Size0.33)
- Career counseling (Eff. Size0.21)
- Statistically significant CCSSE Survey
Item(s) with positive Effect Size
44Thank you.
For more information David Mosley,
Coordinator Institutional Research
Planning SACS Accreditation Liaison Lamar
Institute of Technology PO Box 10043 Beaumont,
Texas 77710 409.880.2207, David.Mosley_at_lit.edu