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Implementing a Readiness Tool to Increase Persistence

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PowerPoint Presentation Author: John Powell Last modified by: Residence Life Created Date: 11/1/2006 10:11:45 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Implementing a Readiness Tool to Increase Persistence


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Implementing a Readiness Tool to Increase
Persistence Improve Student Success
  • Rick Brandel, Mary Rostenberg, Margot
    Saltonstall

3
Who are we? And, who are you?
INTRODUCTIONS
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Goals for this Session
  • Share how our institution
  • measured new students readiness for college
  • intervened with select groups in first few weeks
    of class
  • observed gains in GPA and retention
  • gathered more qualitative feedback
  • Have a engaging session with lively discussion to
    not only increase participants knowledge but to
    increase our own.

5
Learning Outcomes
  • Participants are able to
  • Identify key scales and indices of the instrument
    we used,
  • Understand the process by which we targeted
    student groups for outreach,
  • Analyze our experience and integrate it with your
    own intervention strategies, and
  • Apply our approach (or parts of it) to conducting
    outreach to students at your institution in order
    to increase student success in terms of GPA and
    retention.

6
Setting New Students Up for Success
  • In a group of 3-4, describe and list the
    programs, interventions, efforts on your campus
    that help set new students up for success in
    college
  • Freshman Year Experience
  • Conditionally admitted student program
  • Early alert program
  • Mid-semester grade postings
  • Required academic advising
  • Mentor program
  • Supplemental Instruction
  • Other programs/strategies

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Why do we make all these efforts?
  • Nationally
  • Average dropout rates from first to second year
    of college 33
  • Average six-year graduation rate at four-year
    institutions 57
  • (Habley McClanahan, 2004) (Horn Nevill, 2006)
  • Northern Arizona Univ.
  • Average first year retention rate 70
  • Average six-year graduation rate 50

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Why these efforts? (Continued)
  • Higher attrition rates for
  • ethnic minority students
  • first generation college students
  • low income
  • Students of all abilities leaveneed broad
    programmatic safety nets.
  • Efforts to increase retention have yielded little
  • Increased pressure from constituents

9
Bottom Line
  • We could identify some of our at-risk student
    groups, BUT we needed to know
  • more about which students within those groups
    were most needy and
  • which services might help which students.

10
The Approach
  • In other words, we needed to learn more about
    each individual student.

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Strategic Intervention Model
  • Requirements of a strategic model
  • Implemented early in the first semester
  • Include groups known to be at risk
  • Collaborative and not duplicative
  • academic advising and first year programs
  • Native American Student Services outreach program
  • Summer bridge program and first year mentoring
  • Any key groups interfacing with new freshmen
  • Systematic
  • Whole student
  • Grounded in research

12
ACTs Student Readiness Inventory
  • Reviewed Robbins (2004) meta-analysis of 109
    studies (N 152,985) that examined the effect of
    predictors on academic performance and retention
  • Considered traditional (e.g., standardized test
    scores, HS GPA), demographic (e.g., SES,
    race/ethnicity, gender), and psychosocial and
    study skill factors
  • Participated in a pilot study with ACT, Inc. on
    their development of the Student Readiness
    Inventory
  • Crafted a program model

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Quick Overview of the SRI
  • 108-item, Self-report Instrument
  • Two Indices
  • Academic Success
  • Retention
  • Ten Scales in Three Area
  • Motivation and Skills, such as Commitment to
    College, Academic Discipline, Study Skills
  • Social Engagement, such as Social Activity,
    Social Connection
  • Self-Management, such as Academic Self-Confidence
  • Administered at Orientation
  • Individual Profiles Available Ten Day after
    Administration

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Program Model Summary
  • Prioritize Student Groups for Outreach
  • Ethnic minority students
  • First generation college students
  • Low scores on academic success and/or retention
    index
  • Have one-on-one meeting with students to review
    profiles, matching student needs with campus and
    ACT/SRI resources
  • NAU Website
  • ACT Tool Shop
  • Evaluate
  • Track outreach efforts/communications
  • Meeting attendance, receptivity, and seriousness
  • Referrals to and use of campus resources
  • Learning (self reported by students)

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Prioritizing Student Groups
  • Distributing Profiles
  • Waterfall
  • Summer Bridge Students (EM, FG, LI)
  • Native American Students
  • Other Ethnic Minorities
  • Other First Generation
  • Other Low Scoring
  • (less than 50th percentile on either index)

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Additional Student Groups
  • Distribution of Profiles
  • General review in FYE and Freshman Seminar
  • Remedial skills based course, one-on-one review
    if not met with professional staff
  • Invitation from advising center to meet

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One-on-One Meeting
  • Systematic outreach
  • Look up schedules and set times
  • Postcard home with appointment time
  • Postcard to campus with appointment time
  • Personal e-mail with appointment time
  • Appointment time on their web calendar
  • Reminder phone call 1-2 days before appt
  • If miss scheduled meeting, protocol for
    rescheduling at least twice more

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One-on-One meeting
  • Meeting Content/Purpose
  • Connect with student
  • Match student need to campus resources
  • Website home.nau.edu/emsa/sri.asp
  • Tool Shop act.org/sri/studentguide/toolshop.html
  • Gather some data on SRI experience

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Evaluation Meeting Attendance
Student Affairs Group Met Not Met Group Total
Summer Bridge 149 9 158
Student Support Services 93 31 124
Student Life 35 14 49
Native American St Services 61 27 88
Residence Life 80 42 122
Learning Assistance Centers 106 75 181
Multicultural Student Centers 139 98 237
All Student Affairs 663 296 959
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Evaluation Academic Performance
All students who met to receive SRI results fared
better than those who did not meet with SA staff.
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Evaluation Academic Performance
Students who did NOT meet in regard to SRIs were
more likely to end up on academic probation.
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Evaluation Retention
Students who met were more likely to be retained.
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Apples to Apples
  • How do we know it wasnt just the better students
    who came in to receive their SRI results?

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Apples to Apples
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Other Studies
  • Associations of Resource and Service Utilization,
    Risk Level, and College Outcomes, S. Robbins, J.
    Allen, A. Casillas, A. Akamigbo, M. Saltonstall,
    R. Cole, E. Mahoney P. Gore. Research in Higher
    Education, In Press

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Other Score Uses
  • By scale for specific related services
  • Advertise academic assistance to lower scorers on
    study skills scale
  • Combine multiple scores
  • High scores in com, soc con, com to college to
    recruit RAs, OLs, Leadership
  • Spring follow up
  • Probationers

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Small Group Activity
  • How would using the SRI and or our intervention
    model assist your efforts?

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Your Campus
  • Benefits and Natural Fits
  • Challenges and Limitations

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Share Your Ideas
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Moving Forward
  • At Orientation, build students expectation that
    they will meet one on one in fall to get results
  • Increase students understanding of why one on
    one meeting might be good
  • Fold students with no/invalid SRIs into model for
    outreach

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Summary Points
  • Designate a visible individual to coordinate
  • Collaborate and use natural fits with existing
    resources
  • Conduct systematic analysis
  • Use your data/feedback and improve the process
  • Maximize utility of the instrument
  • Go beyond the limits of the instrument

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