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Todays Community College Student and How to Reach Them

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Goal remained a bachelor's degree: 73.4% first attended a 4-year school, while ... Caveat: When this ratio rises above 0.65, degree completion rates fall. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Todays Community College Student and How to Reach Them


1
Todays Community College Student and How to
Reach Them
  • Michael Sullivan
  • msulliva_at_jjc.edu
  • November 3, 2006

2
Fortune favors the prepared mind.-- Louis
PasteurThe advancement and perfection of
mathematics are intimately connected with the
prosperity of the state.--NapoleonMathematica
l knowledge adds vigor to the mind, frees it from
prejudice, credulity, and superstition.--John
Arbuthnot
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Who Is Enrolling in Community College?
  • Percentage Distribution of Students Enrolling in
    Community College
  • 29.7 place at Level 1 or below
  • 46.0 place at Level 2 3
  • 24.4 place at Level 4 or 5
  • Level 1 Simple arithmetic
  • Level 2 Simple operations with decimals,
    fractions, powers, or roots
  • Level 3 Simple problem solving understanding of
    low-level mathematical concepts
  • Level 4 Understanding of Intermediate
    mathematical concepts, has the ability to
    formulate multi-step solutions to word problems
  • Level 5 Proficiency in solving complex problems
    or proficiency in advanced mathematics

U.S. Department of Education, National Center of
Education Statistics
8
  • According to the National Assessment of
    Educational Progress (NAEP), only 17 of high
    school seniors are considered proficient in
    mathematics.

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Who Is Enrolling in Community College?
  • High School students were surveyed in 10th grade
    and then again in 12th grade
  • Goal remained a bachelors degree 73.4 first
    attended a 4-year school, while 25.2 attended
    community college
  • Goal increased to a bachelors degree 44.4
    first attended a 4-year school, while 51.1
    attended community college
  • Goal was inconsistent or lowered 18.1 attended
    a 4-year school, while 69.3 attended community
    college
  • Goal was some college 17.7 attended a 4-year
    school, while 69.4 attended community college
  • Had no college plans, 10.6 attended a 4-year
    school, while 68.5 attended community college

-Moving Into Town-and Moving On U.S. Department
of Education
11
Who Is Enrolling in Community College?
  • About 11 of high school graduates who attend a
    4-year university have completed less than
    Algebra 2.
  • About 44 of high school graduates who attend a
    Community College have completed less than
    Algebra 2.
  • In fact, if we call Calculus, Precalculus,
    Trigonometry, Algebra 2, less than Algebra 2, the
    rungs on a ladder, each step down a rung,
    increases the probability a student will enroll
    in community college by 8.7.
  • Moving Into Town And Moving On
  • U.S. Department of Education

12
Predictors of Success
  • Transfer predictors
  • Credits in college-level mathematics
  • Earning credits during the summer (a proxy for
    persistence)
  • Continuous enrollment
  • Avoidance of course withdrawals and repeats

-Moving Into Town-and Moving On U.S. Department
of Education
13
Predictors of Success
  • Terminal associates degree
  • Continuous enrollment
  • College-level mathematics credits
  • No withdrawals or repeats
  • Holding a campus job during the first two years
    of enrollment
  • A higher ratio of occupational credits to all
    credits earned. Caveat When this ratio rises
    above 0.65, degree completion rates fall.

-Moving Into Town-and Moving On U.S. Department
of Education
14
Predictors of Success
  • Of all pre-college curricula, the highest level
    of mathematics one studies in secondary school
    has the strongest continuing influence on
    bachelors degree completion. Finishing a course
    beyond Algebra 2 more than doubles the odds a
    student who enters college will complete a
    bachelors degree.
  • Answers in the Tool Box, U.S. Department of
    Education

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Retention
  • 5 of students of any ethnic group who initially
    enroll in mathematics courses three levels below
    college algebra progress through the
    developmental math sequence and successfully
    complete college algebra
  • ACCD Research Brief, Developmental Math, Student
    Outcomes
  • Assessment Research Center, March 2005

17
The Bottom Line
  • Of all the predictors of success, instructors
    have the most influence in preventing course
    withdrawals and repeats and helping students to
    attain college level mathematics credits.

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Ideas for Preventing Course Withdrawals and
Repeats
  • Motivation/Study Skills
  • Getting the Students to Do the Math
  • Inability to retain knowledge
  • Big Picture Ideas

20
Motivation
21
Motivation
  • The Net Present Value of an Education
  • Assume college costs 18,000 per year. Factor in
    opportunity costs of 28,000 per year. Assuming
    you take four years to graduate, these are
    outlays of 46,000 per year. Factor in 3
    inflation.
  • From age 22 to 24, earn 7,415/year more
  • From age 25 to 34, earn 11,691/year more
  • From age 35 to 44, earn 19,799/year more
  • From age 45 to 54, earn 19,140/year more
  • From age 55 to 64, earn 20,156/year more
  • Source United States Census Bureau

22
SOURCE U.S. Department of Education, National
Center for Education Statistics. (2006). The
Condition of Education 2006 (NCES 2006071),
Table 22-1.
23
Motivation
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Study Skills
  • What to Do the First Week of the Semester
  • Learn the names of some of your classmates and
    exchange contact information.
  • Group study sessions
  • Missed classes
  • Budget Your Time.
  • Two to three hours of homework outside of class
    for each hour in class.
  • Consider your work schedule and personal life
    when creating your budget as well.

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Study Skills
"If there's no struggle, there's no progress."
-- Frederick Douglass
  • What to Do Before, During, and After Class
  • Before Class
  • Mentally and physically prepare yourself
  • Read the section
  • Create a list of questions to ask based on your
    reading
  • During Class
  • Arrive early and stay alert during class
  • Take thorough notes
  • Ask questions
  • After Class
  • Reread your notes and the section
  • Do the homework.
  • I hear and I forget
  • I see and I remember
  • I do and I understand
  • Try to figure out why you got certain problems
    wrong
  • Ask your professor or tutor for additional help

28
Study Skills
  • How to Use the Text

29
Study Skills
  • How to Prepare for an Exam
  • Step 1 Beginning about one week before your
    exam, start to redo your homework assignments.
    If you dont understand a topic, be sure to seek
    out help. You should also work the problems
    given in the chapter review. The problems are
    keyed to the objectives in the course. If you
    get a problem wrong, identify the objective and
    examples that illustrate the objective. Then
    review this material and try the problem in the
    chapter review again. If you get the problem
    wrong again, seek out help.
  • Step 2 A day or two before the exam take the
    Chapter Test under test conditions. Be sure to
    check your answers. For those problems that you
    get wrong, determine why you got them wrong and
    remedy the situation.
  • Step 3 Be sure to arrive to the location of the
    exam early. Prepare your mind for the exam.
    Also, be sure that you are well rested. Dont
    try and pull all-nighters. If you need to
    study all night long for an exam, then your time
    management is poor and you should rethink how you
    are using your time or whether you have enough
    time set aside for the course.
  • Step 4 While taking the exam, be sure to read
    the instructions. Show all your work and be neat
    so that your instructor can follow your work and
    find your solution. Also, taking an exam is not
    a race, so there is no reason to turn your exam
    in early. If you finish early, go over each
    problem and verify your answers.

30
Getting Students to Do the Math
  • Classroom
  • Instructor models how to do the math.
  • Students may work exercises in class to see if
    they get it.
  • Assign homework and hope for the best.
  • What happens when the student leaves the
    classroom?

"Mathematics is not a spectator sport!"
31
Inability to Retain Knowledge
32
Inability to Retain Knowledge
33
Inability to Retain Knowledge
  • Preparing for the Section
  • Mixed Practice/Synthesis Review
  • Just-in-Time Teaching
  • Math Journals
  • Give Justification for Steps

34
Inability to Retain Knowledge Preparing for
35
Inability to Retain Knowledge Mixed Practice
36
Inability to Retain Knowledge Mixed Practice
37
Inability to Retain Knowledge Synthesis Review
38
Inability to Retain Knowledge Synthesis Review
39
Inability to Retain Knowledge
  • Try to avoid spending the first few days/weeks of
    class reviewing prerequisite material. Instead,
    review on an as needed basis.

40
Big Picture Ideas
  • Math is like chess
  • Consider versus
  • Factor 9x2 13x 4
  • Logic
  • Connections
  • "If there is a problem you can't solve, then
    there is an easier problem you can't solve find
    it."
  • - George Polya
  • Teach with an eye toward the future
  • State and understand properties/definitions
  • Do not memorize!

41
"Life is good for only two things discovering
mathematics and teaching mathematics." --
Simeon Poisson You are not here merely to
make a living. You are here to enable the world
to live more amply, with greater vision, and with
a finer spirit of hope and achievement. You are
here to enrich the world. You impoverish
yourself if you forget this errand. --Woodrow
Wilson, 28th president of the US
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