Title: Promoting Access While Maintaining Competitive Admissions Standards
1Promoting Access While MaintainingCompetitive
Admissions Standards
- Jefferson Blackburn-Smith, The Ohio State
University - MorraLee Holzaphel, National College Access
Network - Lori Tochihara, University of Arizona
- College Board Forum, November 10, 2006
2What is the National College Access Network?
- Association of 222 college access programs,
resource centers, statewide networks, supporting
members, guarantors and lenders - Non-profit under US Tax Code
- Active in 44 states and the District of Columbia
- I KNOW I CAN is a member of NCAN
3The Student Pipeline in the U.S.
h
For every 50 Ninth Graders
Source NCES Common Core Data, WICHE High School
Graduates, ACT Institutional Survey, NCES-IPED
Graduation Rate Survey 2002
4The Student Pipeline in the U.S.
34 Graduate from High School
Source NCES Common Core Data, WICHE High School
Graduates, ACT Institutional Survey, NCES-IPED
Graduation Rate Survey
5The Student Pipeline in the U.S.
20 Enter College
Source NCES Common Core Data, WICHE High School
Graduates, ACT Institutional Survey, NCES-IPED
Graduation Rate Survey
6The Student Pipeline in the U.S.
13.5 Are Still Enrolled Sophomore Year
Source NCES Common Core Data, WICHE High School
Graduates, ACT Institutional Survey, NCES-IPED
Graduation Rate Survey
7The Student Pipeline in the U.S.
9 Graduate From College (Within 150 Time 6
Years)
Source NCES Common Core Data, WICHE High School
Graduates, ACT Institutional Survey, NCES-IPED
Graduation Rate Survey
821st Century Challenges
- The U.S. ranks 13th among developed nations in
educational attainment - The college participation gaps between affluent
and poor students, and between white and minority
students, are widening - College costs are climbing, and unmet need is
rising for low-income students - The number of young men enrolling in college is
devastatingly low.
9Challenges -- The 4 A s
- Aspiration
- Academic Preparation
- Availability
- Affordability
101. Aspiration
- Weak support for higher education in the
family-first generation - Low perceived value of higher education
- Low socioeconomic status
- Negative attitudes beliefs about college
haves/have nots -
Source The Ohio Board of Regents, T. Rudd, Sept.
2002
11Low-Income Students Attend Postsecondary at
Lower Rates
2001 by The Education Trust, Inc.
Source NELS 88, Second (1992) and Third Follow
up (1994) in, USDOE, NCES, NCES Condition of
Education 1997 p. 64
122. Academic Preparation
-
- Low expectations from teachers
- Lack of parental involvement
- Lack of academic content standards
- Inadequate teacher preparation
- K-12 and higher education are largely
divorced from one another -
-
Source The Ohio Board of Regents, T. Rudd, Sept.
2002
133. Affordability
- Lack of info about financial aid
- Lack of info about price of college
- Price of college
- Declining value of Pell Grants
- Reliance on student loans (FEAR FACTOR)
- Expectation that children should
contribute to the family financially at
some point - Low income and immigrant families may be
in a survival mode
Source The Ohio Board of Regents, T. Rudd, Sept.
2002
144. Availability
- Desired college program not available
- Lack of info about distance learning
opportunities - Lack of technical skills to participate in
distance learning - Programs not offered at times that meet
individual needs - No transportation (esp. for rural
students)
Source The Ohio Board of Regents, T. Rudd, Sept.
2002
15What Is a College Access Program?
- Community based nonprofit organization
- Created to help financially disadvantaged
individuals learn about, enroll in, pay for and
be successful in college - Primary funding is from private sources
16I KNOW I CAN Key Components
- Created to assist urban Columbus Public School
students learn about, enroll in and pay for
college(67 On Free/Reduced Lunch) - Great working relationships with local colleges
- Provides One-on-One Advising and Last Dollar
Grants - Last Dollar Grants available for 5 years
- Track Students To Degree
- Recently added a retention component
17FACTS FIGURES
- Since 1988, I KNOW I CAN has
- Served 94,548 students
- Awarded 16,387 Last Dollar Grants
- totaling 16,581,478
- Leveraged 227.2 million of
- financial aid
- Received 154,629 hours of
- volunteer service
- Recorded 49,235 community service
- hours from Last Dollar Grant recipients
18Dont guidance counselors provide enough
information?
- Ratio of Secondary School Counselors to Students
in - United States 1407
- Arkansas 1694
- South Dakota 1500
- Arizona 1590
19Collaborating With Colleges
- Getting the right students to apply to achieve
the right fit - Exchanging data/information to know what works
- Understanding options available for students and
linking them together - Getting in is not enough-getting through is
the goal!
20OUTCOMES-RETENTION
YEAR RECIP IKIC OSU /-
1999 104 56.7 84.1 -27.4
2000 87 66.6 86 -19.4
2001 72 65.3 86.5 -21.2
2002 79 70.9 87 -16.1
2003 85 83.5 88 -4.5
2004 61 85 89 -4
21ACCESS VS. ADMISSIONS
- HOW DO YOU KEEP YOUR COMMITMENT TO BOTH?
22The University of Arizona
- Tucson, Arizona
- Established in 1885
- Arizonas First University
- Land Grant University
23The University of Arizona
- Research I University
- Association of American UniversitiesNCAA
Division I Pacific 10 ConferenceTotal
Enrollment 36,805Minority 26.90
24Demographic Comparison(2000 U.S. Census UA
Fall 2006 of population)
Arizona Tucson UA
Hispanic 25.3 35.7 14.45 (n 5,320)
African American 3.1 4.3 2.83 (n 1,041)
American Indian 5.0 2.3 2.21 (n 812)
Asian Pacific American 1.9 2.7 5.82 (n 2,141)
White 63.8 55.0 74.69 (n 27,491)
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 (n 36,805)
25Office of Early Academic Outreach
- Mission Statement
- To increase the number of minority, low-income
- and first generation college bound students who
are prepared - to enter a university degree program.
-
26Guiding Principles
- Guiding Principles of Effective
- College Preparation Programs
- Rigorous academic curriculum
- Academic, college, and career counseling
- Co-curricular activities
- Incorporation of students cultures
- Family and community engagement
- Peer support
- Mentoring
- Timing of interventions
- Funding priorities including evaluating the
costs and benefits of program delivery - Source Dr. William Tierney, Director, USC
Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis
27Office of Early Academic Outreach
- Programs and Efforts
- Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement
(MESA) - 40 middle and high schools located in southern
Arizona - After school program hands-on math and science
activities - Over 1,000 students served each year
- PSAT SAT Preparatory Workshops
- Low cost four consecutive Saturdays on UA campus
- Collaboration with high schools to serve
increased numbers of low income students - Gaining Early Awareness Readiness for
Undergraduate Programs - Cohort includes 3,000 current seventh grade
students - 15 middle schools that feed into five high
schools
28Office of Early Academic Outreach
- Programs and Efforts
- College Knowledge for Parents
- Designed for parents of eighth grade students
- Workshops include College Admissions Paying
for College the Transition to High School - Partnership with five local school districts
- Offered in English and Spanish
- College Academy for Parents
- Twelve week program for parents of K-5 students
- Academic focus classes taught by UA staff and
professors - Classes offered in English and Spanish
- Math Summer Programs
- Summer of 2007
- Created to hone Algebra I skills
- Transition between middle and high school
29 Minority Student Recruitment
-
- Mission Statement
- To increase the number of minority, low-income
and first generation college bound students who
enroll at The University of Arizona.
30Minority Student Recruitment
- Recruitment Strategy
- Staff
- Seven full-time staff
- 17 student employees
- Target Sites
- 41 high schools located throughout Arizona
- Identification based on proximity to UA, minority
student enrollment, and willingness to work with
MSR - Regular (and often longer) visits by professional
or student staff member - NonSites
- Phone bank staff by student employees who work in
the evenings - Contact with resident and non-resident students
31Minority Student Recruitment
- Admissions Responsibilities
- Admissions and Scholarship File Review
- Out of State Recruitment
- Elementary and Middle School Campus Visits
32Minority Student Recruitment
- Event Coordination
- Ethnic specific and integrated approach
- Student and Parent Events
- Recruitment and Conversion Events
- High School/Counselor Relations
- Counselor meetings at sites and throughout
Arizona - Communication with school administrators and
district representatives - Community Relations
- Presidents Diversity Advisory Councils
- Ethnic Alumni Clubs
- Community Based Organizations
- Professional Associations
33The Ohio State University
34The Ohio State University
- Four year public, research extensive, Land Grant
university - Founded 1870
- Located in Columbus, OH 15th largest city in
United States - Five regional campuses, open admission process
for Ohio residents - 51,818 total enrollment Columbus campus
- 7,686 students of color (14.8)
- 37,500 undergraduates
35Freshman Class Profile Columbus Campus
- Selective Admission Process
- 19,000 applications for 5,800 enrollment spaces
- SAT middle 50 1120 - 1380
- ACT middle 50 24 29
- 46 AU06 admits came from top 10 of class
- 81 of AU06 admits came from top 25 of class
- 16 AU06 enrollment students of color
36What does Promoting Access Mean for Ohio State?
- Increase enrollments, through recruitment
activities, among targeted students who may not
believe Ohio State is a real option. - Provide college awareness and financial literacy
outreach for families with elementary and middle
school age children. - These are not mutually exclusive efforts
37Targeted students may be
- Racial/ethnic minorities
- Low income students
- First generation students
- Ohio Appalachian students
- Gender/major combinations (i.e. women in
engineering, men in nursing) - Majors (i.e. Agriculture)
38Institutional Structures to Support Access
- Office of Student Financial Aid (1936)
- Office of Minority Affairs (1970)
- Office of Undergraduate Admissions and First Year
Experience (2000) - P-12 project (2000)
- Office of Economic Access (2006)
39Increasing Enrollments Recruitment
- Build your prospect/inquiry pools so they contain
significant numbers of under-represented
students - 60 of search names are students of color
- 26 of search names (from sources that allow
income as a criteria) are low income students - Ohio State recruits more broadly for
under-represented students than others
40Increasing Enrollments Recruitment
- Differentiate your communication flows
- Make your messages population specific
- High ability, low income students hear about
stacking - merit and need-based aid
- Add touches for targeted students
- Making Our Voices Heard mailing
- Joint Minority Affairs/Honors Scholars mailing
- Special college mailings
- Call out cards in invitations highlighting
sessions - of interest
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43Increasing Enrollments Recruitment
- Do something different
- Dvd minority students discussing their
experiences on a majority campus - Urban Radio Advertising Campaign
- Real students with real Ohio State experiences
44Increasing Enrollments Admission Process
- Holistic review process considers race/ethnicity,
socio-economic status, first generation status,
residents of Appalachian counties - Two independent reads of application
- Ohio residents can select a second choice campus
and change to Columbus after completing 1 year
with a 2.0 gpa on a regional campus
45Increasing Enrollments Financial Aid
- Visible Access Scholarships
- Pathways Scholarship for minority and/or Pell
eligible students earning other merit awards
December 1 deadline 2,100 - Morrill Scholars Program for minority,
low-income, first generation, or Ohio Appalachian
students Dec 1 deadline Tuition - Ohio Land Grant Opportunity Scholarship for one
high ability, high need student in each Ohio
county minimum 88 per year Feb 1 deadline and
FAFSA by March 1 full-ride
46Yield by Need Level
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48Early College Outreach
- Consortium of 7 local institutions serving 3
urban school districts with student
/parent/advocate college planning sessions - Ohio State effort working with local community
centers to provide student/parent/advocate
sessions and develop lasting relationships.
49Early College Outreach
- Building Web and print resources
- www.osu.edu/access
50Early College Outreach
- Educational Minutes partnership with Radio One
- - Daily 60 second educational tip featuring OSU
faculty, staff or local high school student with
college aspirations - - Non-promotional
51Contact information
- MorraLee Holzapfel, NCAN 614-202-8632
- holzapfelm_at_collegeaccess.org
- Lori Tochihara, UA 502-626-2300 or 520-621-3812
- lorit_at_arizona.edu
- Jefferson Blackburn-Smith OSU 614-292-7605
- blackburn-smith.3_at_osu.edu