Title: how can libraries help
1how can libraries help?
Retaining Distance Students from diverse
groups in higher education
Thomas Abbott, Dean of Libraries and Distance
Learning, University of Maine at Augusta
Merodie Hancock, Vice President/Executive
Director, Off-Campus Programs, Central Michigan
University Kathleen Walsh, Interim Provost and
formerly Dean of the Library, National-Louis
University
- Engagement, Diversity the Role of the Library
2A Matter of Retention
- Planned, organized and active engagement of
students in the college environment and culture
results in greater retention, higher student
success as well as improved faculty satisfaction.
3Diversity Comes in Many Forms
- Maine 3 minority population
- University Systems 7 campuses 6 minority
students - University of Maine at Augustas profile
- Non-residential 2 major campuses and 10
Centers statewide - Average age 34
- 74 women
- 57 all students are first generation
- 72 qualify for federal financial aid
- 95 work at least one job
- 40 take at least one course at a distance
4Students First
In UMAs 45 years of existence, weve built
programs and services around the needs of our
students where you should begin to
design for student success and retention.
5Libraries and Librarians
- can do more to actively engage students in the
library and across campus
- Understand why student retention is important
- Expand the librarys scope of influence on campus
- Influence curriculum
- Add to the campus social and intellectual
environment - Meet students where they are especially
technologically - Add value to teaching experience for faculty
- Support undergraduate student research beyond the
usual
6One Administrators Perspective
- What is it?
- Recruitment and retention of the desired student
body - Into the desired programs
- Why do we care?
- Mission first
- Economics fortunately support the mission
- How do we do it?
- Population dependent
- Work in progress
7Understanding the Environment - Challenges
- Out of the groove
- No natural support groups
- Not aware of resources
- Faculty access and responsiveness
- Nervousness
- Student diversity and preparedness
- Workload
- Student interaction
- Integrity
- Intellectual Property
- Acceptability
8Understanding the Environment - Opportunities
- Flexibility
- Choice/Access
- Anonymity
- Student Diversity/Breadth
- Increased engagement
- Record of all inputs for later review
- Flexibility
- Higher class run rates
- Real-time access to resources
- New territory
- Greater student perspectives
9Librarians and EM
- Establish Relevance for Teaching and Learning
- Understand the online /distance environment
- Become innovators and learning technology experts
- Address the IP issues, laws and current practices
- Identify models of desirable student interaction
- Go above and beyond to make effective teaching
and learning easy - Enhance research levels and support
10Librarians and EM
- Establish Relevance with Institutional
Effectiveness
- Become a part of data driven decisions
- The only sustainable decision construct
- Need to create ways to get data in future
- Limited resources and increasing focus on
measurable outcomes will make it critical for
libraries to continuously create their cases
within this dynamic environment - Create the library case study in the
digital/virtual age
11Librarians and EM
- Establish Relevance Across the University
- Cant be a silo, Admin wants partnerships
- Writing Center, Faculty Development,
Instructional Technologies, IR, program planning,
etc - Think proactive (e.g. push out services and
support to students vs. pull where they reach
out to you when they feel the need) - Create and promote the value-add scenario
- In the end, its an economic decision (e.g.
linkage of student success to investment made)
12Librarians and EM
- Establish Relevance Across the University
- Cant be a silo, admin wants partnerships
- Think proactive (e.g. push out services and
support to students AND faculty vs. pull where
they reach out to you when they feel the need) - Create and promote the value-add scenarios
- In the end, its an economic decision make
librarians an integral part of the future in
online learning
13Some thoughts fromNational-Louis University
Library
- Even as colleges are talking more about
retention, rates are dropping. and that means - The institution loses revenue
- Enrollment has to work
- much harder
- just to maintain steady state
- The institution
- cant deliver on its mission
- as well as it might
14Prevailing retention models
- Vincent Tinto
- From first experience, establish learning
communities - High expectations
- Strong advising
- Academic, social, personal support directly
connected to overall experience - Frequent contact
- Active, collaborative learning
- George D. Kuh
- Intervene early, follow up at transition points
- Multiple support networks (communicate
frequently) - Early warning systems
- Safety nets
- Active connection
- Engage students in through deep learning (per
NSSE DEEP Learning Study) -
15NLU quick sketch Founded in Chicago,1886
by kindergarten pioneer Elizabeth
Harrison Social justice mission Distributed /
originated field cohort models 1970s Median
student age 38 Headcount 12,500 / FTE
4,500 Undergrad 25 / grad 75
16NLU 2009 beyond
- Increasingly diverse
- Increasingly urban
- 1st-gen college students
- Community responsive
- Niche programs
- Distributed digital
17NLU data point year-to-year retention
- Undergrad retention 2002-2007 improving (up 8)
- strategic decision to end under-enrolled
programs this increase in retention accompanies
a decline in enrollment - Grad retention 2002-2007 consistent within range
of 2 - grad ed programs courses are historically NLUs
core, but overall grad retention is suppressed
by MAT certification completers - After 3 years, only 6 of students who stop out
for more than a year return. -
18NLU data pointsfocus group market research
indicators
- Library is rarely or never mentioned in students
comments or market research results - Service quality including library services is
not a major factor in students decision to stay
or leave - Noel-Levitz Adult Student Priorities Survey 2006
2008 - NLU departing student exit interviews 2006
present - AQIP Examiner Feedback Report 2007
- Lipman-Hearne survey of prospective students 2004
2006 - Peryam Kroll market research survey 2004 2006
19Does NLU Library in facthave any direct effect
on student retention?
- NLU data dont support that conclusion.
- Instead, NLU data indicate clearly that students
stop / drop out because - runs out
- Life circumstances interfere
- They dont need any more courses
- Theyre in academic trouble
20For NLU Library,the picture looks discouraging
EXCEPT
- NLUs annual Graduating Student Survey ranks the
Library far above any other student service in
terms of student satisfaction - 80 ranked Library 1 in years 2003 2007
- In other words, the Library is doing something
that students value very much even if it does
not directly affect their decision to stay or
leave. - And in 2009, NLU Library began offering credit
courses toward lifelong digital information
fluency.
21- So where is the Librarys opportunity to affect
retention?
22Maybe thats the wrong question to ask.
- Maybe we need to refocus around the librarys
essential mission lifelong, independent
learning. - If we did see improvement in retention as a
result of value added by the library, what would
it look like? Would we know it if we saw it? - (And beware the tendency to conflate library
services with student services)
23Maybe one opportunity would look likethe
Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21)
initiative
13 states have signed on to date. Lifelong indepen
dent learning is a core component.
24Next steps, or,moving the ball down the field
- At your institution
- Be at the table so library people can influence
top-level institutional goals planning - Trendspot
- Partner, internally externally
- Assess continuously measure results act on
data - Translate being digital into value for students
- Across the profession
- Case studies might help define library
contributions???