Title: Achieving the Dream: Community Colleges Count
1Achieving the Dream Community Colleges Count
- Derek V. Price, Ph.D.
- Presentation to the 22nd Annual Student Financial
- Aid Research Network Conference
- Chicago, Illinois
- June 10, 2005
2What is Achieving the Dream?
- A national initiative to help more community
college students succeed - Through the initiative, participating colleges
commit to closing achievement gaps by assessing
what is happening on their campuses and make
lasting changes in their own practices and
cultures
3What is Achieving the Dream?
- The work of the initiative is premised on a
data-driven institutional change model - Participating colleges benchmark key student
outcomes - disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and
income adopt strategies to close achievement
gaps, monitor their progress, and share their
results broadly
4Initial Community College Cohort
- 27 community colleges in 5 states Florida, New
Mexico, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia - At least 50 of first-time freshmen were Pell
Grant recipients OR at least 33 of all students
were African-American, Native-American or
Hispanic - This year, the effort will expand into Ohio and
Connecticut
5Achieving the Dream Key Outcomes
- To increase the percentage of students who
accomplish the following - Complete remedial courses and move on to
credit-bearing courses - Enroll in and complete gatekeeper courses such
as Introductory Math and English - Complete courses with a C grade or higher
- Re-enroll from one semester to the next
- Earn certificates and/or degrees
6The Framework for Institutional Change
- Identify the achievement gaps with data
- Engage the broad campus community to diagnose
the arena for intervention - Use evidence to select a strategy to close the
gap - Evaluate the impact of the selected strategy
- If successful, scale the strategy
institution-wide
7Types of data
- Student longitudinal cohort file
- Student survey data (e.g., Community College
Survey of Student Engagement) - Faculty and student focus groups
- Institutional assessment and evaluation reports
- Community stakeholder dialogues
8We call this framework a Culture of Inquiry and
Evidence
- To use data effectively, colleges need to
- Ask the right questions
- Find the right data
- Analyze the data with a critical eye
- A process of critical inquiry and
self-examination using data can - help identify equity gaps and guide us to
solutions - challenge our assumptions and confirm our
hypotheses - benchmark our performance and
- monitor our improvement
9Support structure for Achieving the Dream
Colleges
- National Partnership organizations
- American Association of Community Colleges
Community College Leadership Program University
of Texas at Austin Community College Research
Center Teachers College, Columbia University
Jobs for the Future KnowledgeWorks Foundation
Lumina Foundation for Education MDC MDRC - Nellie Mae Foundation
- and Public Agenda
10Support structure for Achieving the Dream
Colleges
- Each college works with a coach to develop
strategies, set priorities, and implement
institutional improvements - Each college also works with a data facilitator
to analyze student data, and use these data to
inform strategies for improvement, monitor
progress, - and evaluate results
11For more information
- http//www.achievingthedream.org
12Persistence of Pell Grant Recipients
13AtD Goals
- Get schools to use data in decision making
- Think longitudinally
- Use data as part of an applied research design
- Change a general problem into a problem that
belongs to someone - Consistent evaluation
14Data Base Design
- Longitudinal
- Uses existing data
- Each cohort will be followed for 6 years
- All first-time students entering the institution
- Includes full and part-time
- Goal to determine how minority and low-income
students do in college
15Population
- 30 community colleges
- Selected based on low-income and minority
enrollment, concentrated in 5 states
16Indicators
- Continued enrollment and degree attainment
- Success with gatekeeper classes
- Getting through remedial classes
- Units accrued over time
- GPA
- Degrees obtained or transfer
17Future
- Each college will note program changes in time
and population affected - The data will be located on the Achieving the
Dream website (AACC) - Provide external comparisons
- Provide a model for other colleges
18Starting Population in 2002
19Percentage distribution of students, by Pell
status cohort 2002
20Percentage distribution of students, by race and
Pell status cohort 2002
21Percentage of students full-time in first term,
by Pell status cohort 2002
22Percentage distribution of students, by age and
Pell status cohort 2002
23Percentage distribution of students, by major and
Pell status cohort 2002
24Percentage of students referred to remediation
classes, by number of classes and Pell status
cohort 2002
25Percentage of students referred to any
remediation, by attempted and completed status at
the end of year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
26Percentage of students referred to math
remediation, by attempted and completed status at
the end of year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
27Percentage of students referred to reading
remediation, by attempted and completed status at
the end of year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
28Percentage of students referred to English
remediation, by attempted and completed status at
the end of year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
29Percentage distribution of students not referred
to remediation, by enrollment and Pell status
cohort 2002
30Percentage distribution of students referred to
remediation, by enrollment status and Pell
status cohort 2002
31Percentage distribution of referred students, by
remediation and enrollment status at the end of
year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
32Percentage of students completing gateway math
and English at the end of year 2, by Pell status
cohort 2002
33Average cumulative GPA of students at the end of
year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002
34Percentage of students persisting and
transferred/completed at the end of year 2, by
Pell status cohort 2002
35Pell Grant recipients differ from non-recipients
in that
- They are less likely to be White or Asian
- They are more likely to be full-time
- They are more likely to be referred to remedial
education - But
- They are more likely to take and pass remedial
classes - More likely to persist
36John Leejbl_at_jblassoc.com
37Average number of cumulative credits completed by
the end of year 2, by Pell status cohort 2002