Title: Updates: Chancellor
1Updates Chancellors Office andAcademic Senate
- Stephanie Low, Interim Dean, CCCCO
- Jane Patton, President, ASCCC CIO Conference
October 23, 2009
2What is the meaning of a Calif. Community College
Degree?
- To students, the community, the workplace, the
policymakers - The ASCCC paper (www.asccc.org)
3New Clarity A.A. Versus A.S.
- A.S. STEM disciplines (science, technology,
engineering, mathematics and some CTE - A.A. everything else
- Local determination, e.g. graphic design
- BoG approved but. . .
4AB 440 (Transfer Degrees)
- The ASCCC positions
- Whats under discussion
- Where it started ended up
- Whats next
5The PragmaticsCreating New Degrees
- What happens locally
- What happens in the Chancellors Office
- New Forms
- Approval process
- PCAH3
6Tips (from PCAH3)
- Download and use new forms (Rev. March 2009)
- Submit correct number of copies
- original and one copy of 2-page credit program
applications - original only for 1-page applications
- Submit course outlines with new program and
substantial change applications - Labor market data (CTE) must be specific to your
college service area, metropolitan service area,
county or region - State and/or national data is not enough!
- Employer survey
7Components of a degree
- All proposals for associate degrees must include
program requirements, including number of units
for - General Education (local, or IGETC or CSU GE)
- Major or Area of Emphasis
- Competencies
- Local Requirements
- Transfer students should be advised to complete
- CSUGE, IGETC, or university-specific GE pattern
- Transferable courses for electives
8POP QUIZ Major or Area of Emphasis
- . . . must consist of
- A single discipline
- A minimum of 18 semester
- (or 27 quarter) units
- No more than 3 disciplines
- Lower division and upper division courses
- None of the above
9Major or Area of Emphasis components
- 18 units (or 27 quarter units)
- Major Concentration in a single discipline or
related disciplines. If transfer-oriented degree,
then the major will prepare students for a
specific baccalaureate major. - Area of Emphasis Broader grouping of courses.
Prepares students for a field of study or for a
specific major at UC or CSU or may be as broad as
social sciences or theme-based interdisciplinary
coursework (e.g., Gender Studies).
10Local Requirements
- Represents areas of importance to the institution
and local community - For example
- Physical education course
- Information competency
- Computer literacy
- Cultural pluralism/ethnic or gender studies
11Associate Degree Approvals
- 723 associate degrees were approved in 2008
- 244 associate degrees have been approved in 2009
- 2008 approved degrees by T.O.P. category
- T.O.P. 49 Interdisciplinary Studies 527
- T.O.P. 22 Social Sciences 58
- T.O.P. 11 Foreign Language 35
- T.O.P. 10 Fine Applied Arts 31
- T.O.P. 05 Business Management 27
- T.O.P. 21 Public Protective Services 26
- T.O.P. 15 Humanities (Letters) 22
12Something Else New!
- Certificate of Achievement in recognition of
completion of general education transfer patterns
established by - CSU GE-Breadth
- IGETC
- Accredited public postsecondary institutions in
adjacent states which award the baccalaureate
degree - T5, 55070
13Pop Quiz
- Recent changes to Title 5 affecting the associate
degree include all of the following EXCEPT - Allowing colleges to tailor degrees using areas
of emphasis - Strengthening competencies in written expression
and mathematics - Requiring coursework in information literacy
- Strengthening the grade requirement for all
courses in the major or area of emphasis - Adding a certificate of achievement option in
transfer general education patterns
14Opportunities. . .
- Well-designed degree with a major
- Well-designed degree with an area of emphasis
- Certificate of Achievement General Education
Transfer Pattern - Opportunity to re-examine your associate degrees
to ensure quality, academic integrity, and
purpose. - Are your degrees meeting a compelling need?
- Transfer prep
- Career prep
- Community need
- Academic interest
15Pre-requisites
- ASCCC resolutions (positions)
- APG recommendations
- APG status
- Pilot
- Task Group
- Chair Richard Mahon
- richard.mahon_at_rcc.edu
16Minimum Qualifications
- Changes to Disciplines List
- Under discussion Should there be no
equivalency to an AA for all disciplines?
17- Course Identification Number System
- Collaboration with UC CSU
- Your role
18CB 21 Coding
- Where it started
- Progress (credit noncredit)
- Next steps
19Background CB 21
- CB 21 Courses Prior to College/Transfer
- A one level below
- B two levels below
- C three levels below
- Y four or more or transfer
- There was no statewide review to examine
curriculum Are 4 levels enough? Does everyone
identify the same course as college?
20Background CB 21
- Course Prior to College/Transfer different for
every college, even within districts - Levels not comparable
- CB 21 coding not well understood
- Basic Skills levels and student pathways not
defined - Three levels inadequate for current basic skills
needs
21What is Course Prior to Transfer Level?
- The course level in terms of number of levels
prior to transferrable level a bright line - Primarily for basic skills/remedial courses, not
transferrable courses - Can be used for noncredit and credit
degree-applicable and non degree-applicable - Used for English, writing, ESL, reading, or
mathematics in a sequence - NOT used for
- non-sequential courses such as study skills,
Citizenship or ESL Civics - transferable courses because they are college
level
22CB 21 Rubrics Created to Describe Levels Courses
Prior to TRANSFER
Discipline Credit Noncredit Likely bridge to credit
Math Four levels CB 21 A, B, C, D Six levels CB 21 A, B, C, D, E, F Levels C D
English Four levels CB 21 A, B, C, D Seven levels CB 21 A, B, C, D, E, F, G Level B or C
Reading Four levels CB 21 A, B, C, D Five levels CB 21 A, B, C, D, E Level A or B
ESL 6 levels ESL Reading CB 21 A, B, C, D, E, F 8 levels ESL Integrated CB 21 A,B,C,D,E, F, G, H Includes vocational and Cultural skills Most noncredit end 2 levels prior to English 1 A at Level B
6 levels ESL Writing CB 21 A, B, C, D, E, F 8 levels ESL Integrated CB 21 A,B,C,D,E, F, G, H Includes vocational and Cultural skills Most noncredit end 2 levels prior to English 1 A at Level B
6 levels ESL Speaking Listening CB 21 A, B, C, D, E, F 8 levels ESL Integrated CB 21 A,B,C,D,E, F, G, H Includes vocational and Cultural skills Most noncredit end 2 levels prior to English 1 A at Level B
23Things to Consider
- If you code every basic skills class at 4 levels
below, you will have few improvements - It pays to have a full ladder using as many
levels as possible-- to show differentiation - Noncredit - perfect solution for 30 unit limit on
basic skills in Title 5be cognizant of where the
noncredit ladder ties in with credit - Progression into credit levels also shows progress
24Things to Consider
- Levels must mean the same thing across campuses
- Student movement does not preclude you from
getting credit for success elsewhere - provided your neighbor is coding properly and
uniformly as well
25Things to Consider
- If your ladder has more than 4 steps
- Keep as many as you can, but some may have to be
compacted - You may have 7 levels of ESL, your neighbor has 3
- If we allow everyone to code their own number of
levels, colleges would be advantaged/disadvantaged
based solely on their curricular
segmentationnot good - Research indicates too many steps are a barrier
to progress - There are TIPPING POINTS
26Resources
- Data Element Dictionary
- http//cccco.edu  Chancellor's OfficeÂ
- Â DivisionsÂ
- Â Tech. Research Info.Â
- Â MISÂ
- Â Data Element Dictionary (right
links) - T.O.P. Manual
- http//cccco.edu  Chancellor's OfficeÂ
- Â Divisions
- Â Academic Affairs
- Â Taxonomy of Programs (TOP), 6th
Edition (left links) - CB 21 coding
- http//www.cccbsi.org/bsi-rubric-information
27Webinar Training for CB 21 coding
- Nov 17 1000 -1115
- Nov 18 200-315
- Dec. 3 1000-1115
28ASCCC events (Register asap)
- Fall Plenary Session November 12 14 Ontario
- (Teaching Institute) Equity Diversity Feb 19-20
Anaheim - Voc. Leadership Mar 11-13 Napa
- Accreditation Mar 19-20 Newport Beach
- Spring Plenary Session Apr 15-17 SFO
- Faculty Leadership June 17-19 San Diego
- Curriculum July 8-10 Santa Clara