Title: Improving Undergraduate Retention and Graduation Rates at UMass Boston
1Improving Undergraduate Retention and Graduation
Rates at UMass Boston
- Building a Culture and Systems that Support
Student Success
Presentation to the FA Advisory Committee April
27, 2011
2Retention and Graduation Rates Committee
- Joan Becker, Vice Provost, Academic Support
Services and Undergraduate Studies, chair - Kathleen Teehan, Vice Chancellor for Enrollment
Management, co-chair - Andrew Grosovsky, Dean, College of Science and
Mathematics, co-chair - Donna Kuizenga, Dean CLA
- Janet DiPaolo, Coordinator, Library Instruction
- Cheryl Aaron, Assistant Director, Athletics
- Deborah Mahony, Clinical Associate Professor,
Nursing - Neal Bruss, Associate Professor, English Chair,
General Education Committee - Maura Mast, Associate Prof., Math Associate Vice
Provost, VPASS/Undergraduate Studies - Amy Mei, Undergraduate Program Coordinator, CM
- Kevin Murphy, Associate Director, OIRP
- Patrick Day, Vice Chancellor, Student Affairs
- Gail Stubbs, Director, University Advising Center
- Judy Keyes, Director of Financial Aid
- Liliana Mickle, Special Assistant for Retention,
VPASS/Undergraduate Studies - Sam Museus, Assistant Professor, College of
Education and Human Development - Alan Christian, Director, Environmental Science
Program, EEOS - Lorna Rivera, Associate Professor, Womens
Studies - Lisa Buenaventura, Assistant Vice Chancellor,
Co-Curricular Learning and Assessment, Student
Affairs
3Some Definitions
- Retention rates measure the percent of students
in an entering cohort who complete the first year
and return for a second. - Persistence is the ongoing progression from
semester to semester and year to year. - Graduation rates are determined by the percent of
students who complete a degree within a specified
time period. - Retention and graduation rates are publicly
reported for first-time, full-time freshmen.
Graduation rates are calculated based on students
who graduate within six years from initial
enrollment (150 of time). - Retention and graduation rates for transfers are
not publicly reported, but are important for
UMass Boston as 60 of our students are
transfers.
4Why Retention and Graduation Rates Matter
- Retention rates are early indicators of student
success and important predictors of future
graduation rates. Key measures of effectiveness
and quality in higher education, graduation and
retention rates are also increasingly part of
accountability systems. - High attrition is not cost-effective. Recruiting
and orienting new students is costly. - Graduation rates are now reported to students and
their parents through the Federal financial aid
process. - UMass Bostons low graduation rate was singled
out to a national readership in last years New
York Times article reviewing the William Bowen
book, Crossing the Finish Line Completing
College at Americas Public Universities. UMass
Boston was cited in a recent Chronicle of Higher
Education article on the colleges with the lowest
graduation rates.
5Enrollment Trends
6The Problem
7The Problem
8Sample Peer Comparisons
9The Problem
10Many Students Who Leave Transfer to Other
Institutions
- First-Time Freshmen Of the 987 first-time full
or part-time freshmen who entered UMass Boston in
fall 2009, 253 did not return to UMass Boston for
fall 2010. - 49 of those who did not return, enrolled
elsewhere 38 first enrolled at a two-year
school and 62 first enrolled at another
four-year school, including 19 at another UMass
campuses. - Transfer Students Of the 1,756 new transfer
students formally matriculated at UMass Boston in
fall 2009, 25 graduated before fall 2010 and 385
did not return in fall 2010. - 35 of those who did not return, enrolled
elsewhere 38 first enrolled at a two-year
school and 62 first enrolled at another
four-year school, including 13 at another UMass
campuses. - Data source National Student Clearinghouse OIRP
11Starting On Track Matters
- Students who continue into the second year
on-track based on credit accumulation and grade
point average are far more likely to graduate
than students who do not.
12Framework for On Track Indicators
Milestones On-Track Indicators
Return for subsequent terms (retention) Complete needed remediation Begin college-level coursework in math and English Earn one year of college-level credits Complete general education coursework Complete a community-college transfer curriculum Transfer from community college to a university after completing transfer curriculum without completing transfer curriculum Complete a certificate or degree Remediation Begin remedial coursework in first term, if needed Gateway Courses Complete college-level math and/or English in the first or second year Complete a college-success course or other first-year experience program Credit Accumulation and Related Academic Behaviors Complete high percentage of courses attempted (low rate of course dropping and/or failure) Complete 20-30 credits in the first year Earn summer credits Enroll full time Enroll continuously, without stop-outs Register on time for courses Maintain adequate grade-point average
Source OFFENSTEIN, J. MOORE, C. AND SHULOCK, N. (2010) Source OFFENSTEIN, J. MOORE, C. AND SHULOCK, N. (2010)
13Freshman Graduation Rates by On Track Status
14Transfer Graduation Rates by Entry Level and On
Track Status
15Characteristics of High-Performing Institutions
- Strong Networking Values
- A Commitment to Targeted Support
- Cultivate Early Connections
- Maintain Continuous Connections
- Foster Integrated Connections
- A Belief in Humanizing the Educational Experience
- An Ethos of Institutional Responsibility
16Both Academic and Social Connections Matter
- Integration into campus academic and social
systems - Quality and quantity of involvement
- Educationally purposeful engagement
- Connections to collective and individual cultural
agents who value academic achievement and engage
cultural backgrounds
17Recommendations
- Start on Track, Stay on Track
- Early and Often Connect, Engage, and Build
Community
18Recommendation 1 Build a culture and systems
that enable students to start on track and stay
on track.
- Develop and implement a system of on track
indicators by college for freshmen and transfer
students. - Use technology to identify students who are
off-track. - Prioritize the class schedule. Ensure a
sufficient number of sections of the courses
students need to stay on-track are offered when
they are needed. - Significantly increase the capacity of
departments to provide advising for declared
majors. Hire professional advisors to augment
faculty advising.
19- Placement Testing. Develop a better placement
testing system for all incoming students--earlier
and more targeted, convenient, and available for
students and more accurately places them into the
appropriate coursework. -
- Academic Support Services. Provide college-based
and centralized resources to provide academic
support needed by students identified as not on
track. -
- Targeted Services for Off Track Students. Develop
and implement a course for re-admission,
financial aid, and transfers in jeopardy.
20Recommendation 2 Implement the UMass Boston
Freshman Commitment aimed at increasing the
success of students who enter as Freshmen.
- Develop an intentional first year experience
including orientation and college-based learning
communities. - Identify and support teaching and learning that
promotes the retention of freshmen - Increase opportunities to extend learning and
engagement (undergraduate research, study abroad,
service learning, civic engagement, co- and
extra-curricular activities)
21Recommendation 3 Implement programs specifically
tailored for Transfer Students to support their
academic and social transition and success at the
University.
- Develop programming that connects transfer
students to the university community - Develop programming aimed at increasing transfer
student engagement and success (undergraduate
research, study abroad, service learning, civic
engagement, co- and extra-curricular activities)
22Additional Recommendations
- Address informational and customer service
issues. - Increase need-based financial aid, on campus
employment opportunities, and college-sensitive
off-campus employment opportunities. - Build residence halls
- Data analysis and evaluation.
23Challenges
- Ensuring that all units and departments of the
university understand the importance of and have
the capacity to advance student success. - Building a system of accountabilitymaking sure
that we all have to own it doesnt translate
into no one is accountable. - The deficits, especially in terms of
college-based success programs, major advising,
and structures and programming that connect and
engage students, are significant. These deficits
are financial and cultural. - Major investments are needed!