Outreach: A New Way to Recruit Underrepresented Students - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 51
About This Presentation
Title:

Outreach: A New Way to Recruit Underrepresented Students

Description:

Herrera and Handel (2003) Outreach Workshop on Diversity. 1 ... Stephen J. Handel. Director Enrollment Planning & Undergraduate Outreach ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:28
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 52
Provided by: stephen589
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Outreach: A New Way to Recruit Underrepresented Students


1
Outreach A New Way to Recruit Underrepresented
Students
  • Alfred Herrera
  • Director Center for Community College
    Partnerships
  • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Stephen J. Handel
  • Director Enrollment Planning Undergraduate
    Outreach
  • Office of the President, University of California
  • A Workshop for Excellence by Diversity. What does
    it take to make higher education a meaningful
    experience?
  • June 2003 Amsterdam

2
Outline of Presentation
  • I. A New Model for Outreach
  • II. Elements of a Transfer-Going Culture
  • III. Programmatic Responses
  • IV. USA and Europe Linking Our Work to Your Work

3
Cultural Context (USA)
  • Political shift away from race/ethnicity in the
    admissions process.
  • Inexorable demographic trends.
  • Rise in vocational tracking.
  • How will higher education institutions remain
    accessible to underrepresented students?

4
Cultural Parameters (USA)
  • No other criteria can effectively replace
    race/ethnicity in the admissions process.
  • Student outreach programs must assist all
    students, especially those that are educationally
    disadvantaged.
  • Outreach is the only tool left to create a
    diverse class.

5
I. A New Outreach Model Goals
  • Diversity Contribute to the enrichment of UC
    campuses through a diverse student body.
  • Access Improve opportunities for California
    students in educationally disadvantaged
    circumstances to achieve eligibility and to
    enroll at UC campuses.

6
Outreach Model Characteristics
  • Focus on long-term, systemic change.
  • Recalibrate UC outreach away from recruitment
    toward academic preparation.
  • Outreach programs as the engine of change.
  • Assist all students in educationally
    disadvantaged circumstances.

7
II. Elements of a Transfer-Going Culture
  • Establish transfer to a four-year institution as
    a high institutional priority.
  • Ensure that transfer is perceived by students as
    expected and attainable.
  • Offer a rigorous transfer curriculum for all
    students that includes writing, critical
    thinking, mathematics, and the sciences.

8
Elements of a Transfer-Going Culture
  • Provide high quality instruction, including
    innovative and research-based pedagogies.
  • Develop intensive academic support programs based
    on academic excellence models (e.g., academic
    counseling, peer tutoring, and reciprocal
    learning techniques).

9
Elements of a Transfer-Going Culture
  • Create an environment of belonging in which
    students feel stimulated to achieve at high
    academic levels.
  • Establish strong community and family linkages
    that foster intellectually stimulating, secure,
    and culturally rich environments for students on
    and off campus.

10
III. Programs Developed with a Focus on Creating
Transfer-Going Cultures
  • Focus on 3 Constituencies
  • Faculty
  • Students
  • Staff

11
Programs Developed with a Focus on Creating
Transfer-Going Cultures
  • Faculty Creating Transfer-Going Cultures in
    Partnership with Community College Faculty
    (UCLA)
  • Students Academic Development Programs to
    Enhance Student Preparation and Expectations
    (SITE)
  • Staff Professional Development Programs for
    Community College Counselors (ETS)

12
UCLA Center for Community College Partnerships
(CCCP)
  • The Center is responsible for developing and
    strengthening academic partnerships between UCLA
    and California community colleges. The goals are
    to work with community college administrators and
    faculty to develop a campus-wide transfer culture
    for all students, to strengthen and diversify the
    curriculum, to improve teaching pedagogy, to
    develop strong academic support programs, to
    increase the number of transfer eligible
    community college students, and, ultimately, to
    increase the diversity and academic
    competitiveness of the UCLA transfer applicant
    pool.

13
UCLA Center for Community College Partnerships
(CCCP)
  • An important focus of the work of CCCP is to
    challenge educators low expectations of
    underrepresented and under-served students, to
    create institutional change, and to foster the
    development of an academic climate and a transfer
    culture that emphasizes excellence and access to
    transfer for all community college students.

14
UCLA/Community College Academic Consortium
  • Develop a rigorous transfer-focused academic
    culture in order to increase transfer rates.
  • Redefine curriculum, pedagogy, and academic
    support services.
  • Employ strategies for academic acceleration
    rather than remediation.

15
Disciplinary Workgroups
  • Composition, mathematics, science, social science
    and academic support programs.
  • Began to discuss and identify barriers to
    academic development and transfer for students
    from a particular institution.
  • Conducted a review of existing practices and
    services at their campuses.
  • Developed recommendations and pilot activities
    for addressing barriers at their campuses.

16
Peer Counselors
  • Former transfer students from that institution.
  • Serve as role models.
  • Provide information about life as a transfer
    student.
  • Provide referrals to UCLA/UC Admissions
    representatives.
  • Provide presentations to classes and student
    organizations.
  • Discuss transition between 2- and 4-year
    institutions.
  • Provide information on success and excellence in
    college.
  • Serve as a liaison between the students/campus
    and UCLA.
  • Organize campus visits to UCLA.

17
Barriers to Student Academic Achievement and
Transfer
  • Inability to read and write at levels high enough
    to perform successfully in their coursework.
  • Lack of motivation, particularly in the sciences.
  • Inadequate academic tutoring and counseling.
  • Emphasis on remediation rather than excellence.

18
Barriers to Academic Achievementand Transfer
  • Lack  of incentive and support for redesigning
    curriculum and rethinking pedagogical practices.
  • Lack of coordination and synergy among academic
    support programs.
  • Need for greater communication among academic
    support programs, counselors, and financial aid
    officers.
  • Sense that transfer is a remote possibility
    rather than an expected result of community
    college education.

19
Outcomes and Activities
  • Math
  • Supplemental instruction model required two hours
    of mandatory tutoring every other week, allowing
    for additional complex problem solving and more
    time on task and comprising 10 of their grades.
  • A UCLA mathematics professor mentored the tutors
    on a weekly basis, reviewing the worksheets and
    quizzes they developed for the tutorial sessions
    and assisting with the Saturday tutoring.

20
Outcomes and Activities
  • Fast-Track English
  • Fifteen students with strong performance records
    in English 57 or placed into the English 60 were
    invited to by-pass English 60 and join the
    English 101 Fast Track class.
  • Students enrolled concurrently in a one-unit
    course requiring two extra hours of instruction
    weeklyan hour meeting one-on-one with the
    professor and an hour in a writing lab with
    tutors.

21
Outcomes and Activities
  • Paired Courses
  • English courses are paired with courses from
    other departments such as social science,
    history, psychology, and science to accelerate
    learning.
  • Many of these courses involve supplemental
    tutoring.

22
Outcomes and Activities
  • Writing Seminar
  • UCLA Writings Program faculty conduct a
    composition seminar for community college
    faculty. It is an opportunity for a conversation
    centered around composition and writing.
  • This collaborative study of theories and
    practices is open to faculty in English and other
    disciplines.
  • The seminar is small, no more than 15
    participants so the group can engage in
    meaningful discussions about the use of writing
    in the classroom

23
Summer Intensive Transfer Experience (SITE)
  • Six day residential and academic program that
    provides academic information and prepares
    students for the road to transfer, prior to their
    enrolling in a community college, or as soon as
    possible.

24
SITE Philosophy
  • Provide motivation and mentoring.
  • Create a sense of belonging.
  • Introduce students to the concept of a learning
    community.
  • Provide tools to navigate through the system.

25
SITE Philosophy
  • Expose students to the University of California
    campuses.
  • Encourage students to prepare for transfer early.
  • Provide network of support for achieving
    excellence.
  • Introduce students to the academic rigors of a
    research university.

26
SITE Agenda
  • Welcome and keynote speech.
  • Workshop for students and a separate session for
    parents.
  • Informal BBQ so parents can talk to UCLA faculty,
    staff and students.
  • Writing workshops conducted by UCLA faculty and
    support service staff.

27
Teaching and Learning
  • Writing Across the Curriculum -- Students attend
    a 4 session writing workshop taught by a UCLA
    faculty member.
  • A UCLA professor provides students with a
    simulated lecture over 3 days. The professor and
    TA discuss note taking, time management and other
    college excellence skills.

28
Counseling and Advising
  • Students meet with UCLA staff and team leaders to
    discuss the basics of transfer and to develop a
    plan to help them prepare for transfer to
    UC/UCLA.
  • Counselors from local community colleges conduct
    workshops on maximizing students time at the
    community college.

29
Additional SITE Workshops
  • Careers vs. Majors
  • Using the Internet for Research
  • Overcoming Transfer Obstacles
  • Preparation for UC Transfer
  • Teaching and Graduate Programs

30
Follow-Up Saturday Academies
  • Provides students with
  • On-going opportunities to interact with UCLA
    students, staff and faculty.
  • Introduce students to a variety of academic
    excellence workshops.
  • Help students become familiar with a University
    campus and the resources and services available.

31
UNIVERSITY
OF
CALIFORNIA
E
NSURING
T
RANSFER
S
UCCESS


Counselor Institute
32
Ensuring Transfer Success
  • provides community college counselors with
    comprehensive information about UC and CSU
    transfer admission policies and practices in a
    seminar-like environment, allowing in-depth
    discussion and exchange.

33
How does ETS work?
  • Institute Curriculum
  • Instructional Focus
  • Institute Publications and Materials

34
ETS Institute Curriculum
  • Provide substantive strategies for transfer
    student preparation.
  • Real Advice What does it take to be admitted to
    UC?
  • Admission vs. Selection
  • Major preparation vs. general education

35
ETS Instructional Focus
  • Above allDialogue
  • These Institutes were intended to bring two-year
    and four-year transfer staff together to share
    problems and solutions.
  • This can only be accomplished through active
    engagement of the issues.

36
ETS Instructional Focus
  • Dialogue requires a comfortable space.
  • There is a need to create opportunities for
    participants to engage in substantive discussion.
  • How? By emphasizing a common purpose helping
    students to transfer.

37
ETS Instructional Focus
  • Creating a common purpose is best achieved using
    the case study method.
  • Good case studies help represent in a concrete
    and personal way essential transfer issues.

38
ETS Instructional Focus
  • Small groups
  • Case study method requires discussion.
  • This only can be accomplished if participants
    have opportunity to interact.
  • Understanding requires time.

39
ETS Instructional Focus
  • Addressing Different Levels of Expertise
  • Expertise influences effectiveness.
  • Veteran counselors need different information
    than new counselors.
  • ETS provides workshops for both groups.

40
Institute Publications
  • Gatherings like ETS are useful, but how do you
    influence long-term learning and professional
    development?
  • Develop reference material for on-going reference
    throughout the academic year.

41
Institute Publications
  • Publications are low-cost, desk-top productions.
  • More attention is paid to the specific needs of
    transfer counselors and staff.
  • Wide distribution on the web and CD.

42
ETS Participation Levels
  • Since its inception, in 1993, ETS Institute
    participation has increased 237, serving over
    5,000 counselors.
  • Last year nearly all of Californias community
    college sent representatives.
  • Over 70 of of the community colleges that
    participated sent more than 4 representatives.

43
ETS Counselor Institutes Enduring Elements
  • Practical and specific advice.
  • Commonality of purpose.
  • Meeting the unique needs of participants.
  • Colleagues as equal partners.
  • Advising materials for on-going reference.
  • Active engagement by all.

44
IV. USA and Europe Linking Our Work to Your Work
  • How can the characteristics of a transfer-going
    culture and UCs programmatic responses be
    translated to the Dutch experience?

45
The Dutch Experience Discussion
  • Students
  • Who is underrepresented?
  • Do they have special academic needs?
  • What kinds of programmatic responses are
    suggested?

46
The Dutch Experience Discussion
  • Faculty
  • What are the major characteristics of the the
    faculty?
  • Are faculty supportive of diversity goals?
  • Is the curriculum appropriate for the new
    students preparing for university?

47
The Dutch Experience Discussion
  • Staff
  • Who advises students? Faculty? Trained
    counselors?
  • Who is most influential in advising students?
  • What professional development programs can be
    developed to foster diversity among student
    advisers?

48
Reporting Back
  • Programmatic Proposals for
  • Faculty
  • Students
  • Staff
  • Follow-up and Wrap-Up

49
For more information
  • Alfred Herrera
  • Director, Center for Community College
    Partnerships
  • University of California, Los Angeles
  • 2217 Campbell Hall, Box 957176
  • Los Angeles, CA 90095-7176
  • 310-267-4441
  • FAX 310-267-4446
  • aherrera_at_college.ucla.edu

50
For more information
  • Stephen J. Handel, Ph.D.
  • Director Transfer Enrollment Planning
  • Undergraduate Outreach
  • Office of the President
  • University of California
  • 1111 Franklin Street, 9th Floor
  • Oakland, California 94607
  • (510) 987-9559
  • stephen.handel_at_ucop.edu

51
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com