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Intentional Advising to Strengthen Student Development and Outcomes

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Developmental Education in the Spotlight. For every 10 freshmen seeking an associate degree: 5 require DE and fewer than 1 graduate in 3 years (Complete College America) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intentional Advising to Strengthen Student Development and Outcomes


1
Intentional Advising to Strengthen Student
Development and Outcomes
Rebecca Goosen, President, NADE
Rebecca.goosen_at_sjcd.edu
2
Welcome
  • Can you please tell us a little about yourselves?
  • What is your title (administrator, faculty,
    staff, etc.)?
  • What is your primary area of interest?
  • What type of institution are you from (2 yr., 4
    yr. private, public)?

3
Developmental Education in the Spotlight
  • National, 60 of students need developmental
    education
  • 20 of students referred to developmental
    mathematics and 33 referred to developmental
    reading never enrolled (AtD data)

4
Developmental Education in the Spotlight
  • Only 44 of referred reading and 31 referred
    math ever complete the full sequence (AtD data)
  • 14 of community college students do not complete
    a singe credit in the first term (AtD data)

5
Developmental Education in the Spotlight
  • For every 10 freshmen seeking an associate
    degree 5 require DE and fewer than 1 graduate in
    3 years (Complete College America)
  • Only a quarter of part time students finish a
    degree (Complete College America)
  • Economically disadvantaged students struggle the
    most (Complete College America)

6
Developmental Education in the Spotlight
  • Minorities access higher education often through
    community colleges and are over represented in
    developmental education (Complete College
    America)
  • Too many exit points along the continuum for
    students

7
Are they lost in our systems?
8
Traditional Pathway for Students in College
  • Sign up on line, take what students think they
    need
  • Maybe see a counselor
  • Some colleges assess with one measure
  • Many colleges do not have mandatory assessment
    and placement

9
Traditional Pathway for Students in College
  • Enroll in what looks good
  • Not all colleges have mechanisms to identify
    struggling students
  • Fail, drop out, accumulate large financial aid
    issues

10
Students Dont Do Optional
11
Students Often Take the Perceived Easiest Route
  • But is it?
  • How many times do they repeat the same course?
  • What is their GPA?
  • What skills are they lacking?
  • How are the external variables (life) affecting
    them?
  • Have they committed to their education?

12
What Does Research and Data Tell Us About
Students?
13
  • Students that fail to enroll in developmental
    course sequences do not persist
  • Students that fail to pass courses in the
    sequence do not persist
  • There are many national initiatives hopeful to
    increase student successful completion of
    Developmental Education

14
  • Women students have higher chance of passing
  • African American males are at higher risk
  • Full time students have higher rates of
    completion

15
Many Exit Points
  • 82 enroll 57 pass 25 do not complete
  • Of the 57 that pass
  • 41 enroll 29 pass 12 do not complete
  • Of the 29 that pass
  • 22 enroll 16 pass 6 do not complete

3 levels below college ready
2 levels below college ready
1 level below college ready
16
Systematic Program
  • Assessment of Skills
  • Cognitive and non cognitive
  • Assessment of social situation
  • Assessment of career goals
  • Mandatory Advising
  • On entry
  • Throughout the semester
  • Number of touch points

17
Systematic Program
  • Student Success Course
  • Focused on building self actualization and
    accountability
  • Financial aid component
  • Available Tutoring
  • On line
  • In person
  • Trained tutors (para-professional or peer tutors)

18
Systematic Program
  • Student Centered Instruction
  • Active learning situations
  • Students are engaged
  • Facilities On Campus For Learning Support
  • Departmental labs
  • Centralized campus learning support centers
  • Location
  • Sharing resources (Boylan, 2002)

19
Rules for Success
  • Develop strong relationships between academic
    support and instructional units on campus
  • Develop plans for establishing pathways for
    student success
  • Train each other
  • Share information regularly
  • Experience each others roles intimately
  • If instructor, learn to advise
  • If student development, teach a student success
    class

20
Steps to Developing Intentional Pathways
21
Analyze Data
  • What is working?
  • Short term long term data
  • Enrollment patterns
  • Look at trend lines (5 year past history)
  • Provide data to individual faculty members as
    well as department data
  • Use several data points
  • Completers
  • Who withdrew/why?
  • How many A-Cs?
  • How did they do in the first transfer level
    course after DE?

22
Analyze Data
  • What is successful?
  • What is their demographic?
  • What do they look like?
  • What is their academic history at the
    institution?
  • What was their pre-college pathway?
  • What is their goal?

23
Analyze Data
  • What mechanism is contributing to those students
    succeeding?
  • There is no silver bullet
  • But a lot of silver buckshot
  • Not one answer but rather multi-variables
  • Identify likely variables that led to some
    students succeeding
  • Example College ready in reading, maturity by
    age or selection of major, timeline to graduation
  • What needs to happen to support more of your
    students?
  • What variables have the strongest impact?

24
Analyze Data
  • Concentrate on the positive
  • Look for why some students succeed rather than
    why students fail
  • Do more of what works
  • Begin with the low hanging fruit

25
Determine Best Chance Progression
  • Examine all the modes of delivery and determine
    the three that are showing the most success
  • Limit offerings to only those
  • Limit exceptions to the rule
  • Ensure faculty are trained in instruction and
    advising personnel understand the different
    modalities
  • Develop a placement matrix

26
Placement Matrix-Math
Traditional Lecture Emporium Model Accelerated DE/College Algebra
Reading Level Any level College level College level
Math Level Any level Any level Any level
Motivation/Maturity Level Any level High level High level
Distance to Graduation Not a factor Close to graduation Close to graduation
Employed Not a factor May require more time on task Do they have extra time?
Outside Commitment Not a factor Family, etc. computer access? Family, etc. could be issue
27
Supports Needed
  • Ensure faculty are trained to deliver new
    instruction
  • Professional development is essential
  • Advising personnel understand the different
    modalities and pathways offered
  • Joint instructional and student development
    regular meetings

28
Supports Needed
  • Educate students concerning options
  • Mandatory orientation
  • And/or First Year Experience
  • And/or Student Success Class
  • All FTIC students should have an educational plan
    by the end of the first semester

29
Limit options
  • Students do not do optional
  • Limit options
  • Prepare data to support options
  • Share with students
  • Engage them in planning their education
  • Advising sessions
  • Educational planning sessions
  • Orientation

30
Mandate
  • All students should be assessed
  • Diagnostics
  • Cognitive/Non-cognitive
  • Career exploration
  • No late registration
  • Students should be placed according to their
    needs
  • Is it wise to delay taking math?
  • Is reading at college level important?

31
Mandate
  • Determine which pathways are optimum for your
    students based on your data
  • Are students delaying taking math and that
    effects program completion?
  • Are technical students in need of skill
    development?
  • Do they know how to be a student?
  • What are the students expectations of college?
  • Do they need help in learning to be a student?
  • Mandate Orientation

32
Guide Students Through The Terrain
  • Educational plans should be completed by end of
    first semester
  • Mandatory advising
  • Provide pre set pathways for first two semesters
  • Establish connections
  • Peers Institution Faculty

33
On Ramps
  • Traditional
  • Enroll Course Work Degree Employment
  • On Ramps
  • Enroll Course Work Certificate Employment
  • Course Work Associates Employment
  • Course Work Bachelors Employment
  • Course Work Masters Employment

34
Faculty As Advisors
  • Share the workload
  • Many models of how this works
  • Training is essential

35
Faculty As Advisors
  • Advantages
  • Bridges the gap between instruction and student
    development
  • Faculty develop a deeper understanding of their
    students beyond content
  • Students have greater access to information
  • Can be incorporated with a course
  • May free up counselors time to do other types of
    student support
  • Disadvantages
  • May increase faculty load
  • May confuse students
  • Faculty may be confused as to when to hand off to
    student development

36
Things To Think About
  • Students need to be assessed
  • Pathways should not be left up to chance
  • Use data to guide decision making
  • Provide comprehensive student success services

37
Things To Think About
  • Coordinate instructional and student development
    services
  • Consider present staff and what the staffing
    needs may be
  • Provide professional development for all staff

38
What limits your ability today to design an
intentional pathway for students?
39
Questions?
40
Developmental Education Initiatives
  • Achieving the Dream http//www.achievingthedream.o
    rg
  • Bill Melinda Gates Foundation
    http//www.deionline.org
  • Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
    Teaching http//www.carnegiefoundaiton.org/problem
    -solving/developmental-math
  • Complete College America-Time is the Enemy
    www.completecollege.org

41
  • Getting Past Go http//gettingpastgo.org
  • The National Center for Academic Transformation
    http//www.thencat.org/whatwedo.html
  • Jobs for the Future http//www.jff.org
  • Pathways to College Network http//www.pathwaystoc
    olldege.net
  • California Basic Skills Initiative
    http//strategicplan.cccco.edu
  • http//www.cccbsi.org

42
  • Tennessee Developmental Studies Redesign
    Initiative http//www.tnredesign.org
  • Washingtons Integrated Basic Education and
    Skills Training (I-BEST) http//www.sbctc.ctc.edu/
    college/_eibestresojurces.aspx

43
Resources
  • Boylan, H. (2002). What works Research-based
    best practices in developmental education. Boone,
    NC continuous Quality Improvement
    Network/National Center for Developmental
    Education.
  • Boylan, H., Saxon, D.P. (2012). Attaining
    Excellence in Developmental Education
    Research-based recommendations for
    administrators. Boone, NC National Center for
    Developmental Education.
  • Kuh,G., Kinzie,J., Schuh,J., Whitt,E. (2005).
    Student success in college Creating conditions
    that matter. San Francisco, CA Jossey-Bass.

44
  • McCabe,R. (2000). No one to waste a report to
    public decision makers and community college
    leaders. Washington, DC Community College Press.
  • Upcraft, M., Gardner, J. (1989). The freshman
    year experience. San Francisco, CA Jossey-Bass.
  • Valdes, G., Gifford, B. (2012). Final report on
    developmental mathematics and language project.
    Retrieved on March 29, 2012 from
    http//www.carnegiefoundation.org/stites/default/f
    iles/elibrary/dev_math_report.pdf

45
Thank you for attending!
  • Rebecca Goosen, MS, Ed.S., Ed.D.
  • President, NADE
  • Associate Vice Chancellor for College Preparatory
  • San Jacinto College
  • 4624 Fairmont Pkwy, Suite 203
  • Pasadena, TX 77504
  • 281-459-7667
  • Rebecca.goosen_at_sjcd.edu
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