And Opportunities to Get it Done! Marc Cutright, Ed.D. University of North Texas National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students 7 th Annual Conference.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Erasmus Mundus Information Day 20 January Erasmus Mundus Information Day 20 January ERASMUS MUNDUS PREPARING YOUR APPLICATION.
Advertisements

Using institutional renewal to build a culture of accountability and evidence-based decisions. MSCHE IN LATIN AMERICA Moises Silva, Ph.D. Director of Institutional.
Cathy Jordan, PhD Associate Professor of Pediatrics Director, Children, Youth and Family Consortium University of Minnesota Member, Community Campus Partnerships.
June 6, 2004 COMPUTER SCIENCE TEACHERS ASSOCIATION REPORT FOR ACMs SIGS John White ACM CEO.
AIAA Task Force on Earth Observations 2 October 2009 AIAA HQ Reston VA.
1 Mid-Term Review of The Illinois Commitment Assessment of Achievements, Challenges, and Stakeholder Opinions Illinois Board of Higher Education April.
Career and College Readiness Kentucky Core Academic Standards Characteristics of Highly Effective Teaching and Learning Assessment Literacy MODULE 1.
No Child Left Behind Sub-grant Application Project Planning & Evaluation John Cradler Ruthmary Cradler Educational Support Systems
National Academy of Engineering of the National Academies 1 Phase II: Educating the 2020 Engineer Phase II: Adapting Engineering Education to the New Century...
THE COLLEGE TRANSFER STUDENT IN AMERICA: THE FORGOTTEN STUDENT Bonita C. Jacobs, Ph.D. President North Georgia College & State University September 13,
Presented by: Jerry Legge Associate Provost for Academic Planning (Interim), and Professor of Public Administration and Policy (SPIA) Provost Advisory.
Foundations of Excellence TM in the First College Year Laying a Foundation for First Year Assessment Nazareth College of Rochester, Marywood University.
MSCHE Annual Conference December st Century Higher Education Projections Increasingly diverse student populations Widely varying levels of secondary.
Gail G. Evans Senior Fellow, AAC&U Building Campus Change Through Curricular Mapping AAC&U General Education & Assessment Network Meeting February 27,
HE in FE: The Higher Education Academy and its Subject Centres Ian Lindsay Academic Advisor HE in FE.
Documenting & Assessing Community- Engaged Scholarship (CES) A Workshop for Promotion & Tenure Committees Sarena Seifer Community-Campus Partnerships for.
Mobility, Time to Degree, and Institutional Practices: Towards a New Conceptual Model of Undergraduate Retention for Underrepresented Students Lucy Arellano,
Survey Responses Challenges and Opportunities Matt Richey St. Olaf College.
A Roadmap to Successful Implementation Management Plans.
Note: Refer to Student Handbook & Catalog for additional information
Institutionalizing Service Learning and Civic Engagement Paul Sather, Director, Service Learning Academy Deborah Smith-Howell, Associate Vice Chancellor.
Reform and Innovation in Higher Education
What is Pay & Performance?
Transition IEP Using Your IEP to Plan for Your Life After High School
Core Curriculum for Clinical Coaching Intro - VNIP Model
Transfer Success: Skills to Succeed in a Baccalaureate Program Charlene A. Stinard, Director Transfer and Transition Services University of Central Florida.
Faculty Peer Mentoring for New Online Instructors: Design, Implementation and Assessment Susan Ko, Office of Faculty Development and Instructional Technology.
Sponsored by CEPA Foundation – Cultural & Educational Programs Abroad CEPA Foundation Webinar #3 on Curriculum Integration: Evaluation Integrating Education.
What’s an ADP Goal Got to Do with It? Division for Diversity and Inclusion: 2013/14 Presenter - Ken Coopwood, Sr., Ph.D., CDE, LSSBB Vice President for.
1. Karadeniz Technical University Continuing Education Center has been established to organize Karadeniz Technical University’s continuing education programs,
Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter The Future of Training and Development.
Virginia Teacher Performance Evaluation System 0 August 2012.
DR. CHIALIN HSIEH DIRECTOR OF PLANNING, RESEARCH & INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS APRIL 20, 2010 ARCC 2010 Report Accountability Reporting for the Community.
Northeast Region Group Planning Time July 11, : :30 The New Northeast Team.
1 Literacy PERKS Standard 1: Aligned Curriculum. 2 PERKS Essential Elements Academic Performance 1. Aligned Curriculum 2. Multiple Assessments 3. Instruction.
The Mission of Belmont University Belmont University is a student-centered Christian community providing an academically challenging education that empowers.
The Framework for Teaching Charlotte Danielson 4c: Communicating with Families 1 6/12/201 3.
New Challenges for Student Success: The Transfer Adult Learner Landscape John N. Gardner University of Maine System Polycom November 17, 2010 Copyright,
Gwendolyn Archibald Higher Education & Student Affairs The University of Iowa N491 Lindquist Center EVALUATING A GRADUATE PROGRAM.
Using the New CAS Standards to Assess Your Transfer Student Programs and Services Janet Marling, Executive Director National Institute for the Study of.
DATA TRACKING AND EVALUATION 1. Goal of the STEP program: To increase the number of STEM graduates within the five-year period of the grant. You have.
Now That They Stay, What Next?: Using NSSE Results to Enhance the Impact of the Undergraduate Experience.
Leading the Way : Access. Success. Impact. Board of Governors Summit August 9, 2013.
Branding & Integrated Marketing Future Is Now Forum Annapolis, MD By George Dehne GDA Integrated Services.
A Commitment to Excellence: SUNY Cortland Update on Strategic Planning.
The Carnegie Classification for Institutions Engaged with Community: Challenges, Benefits, and Understandings from the Documentation Process Amy Driscoll,
1 Strategic Planning: An Update March 13, Outline What we have done so far? Where do we stand now? Next steps?
Title I Needs Assessment and Program Evaluation
Cabrillo College Emerging Scholars Institute Draft Proposal Update Spring 2008.
Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
ACHEA Conference July 2002 ‘The Challenge Of Quality for the Higher Education Administrative Professional.’ ACHEA Association of Caribbean Higher Education.
Achieving Campus Diversity: The University of Central Florida Model
Engagement as Strategy: Leading by Convening in the SSIP Part 2 8 th Annual Capacity Building Institute May, 2014 Joanne Cashman, IDEA Partnership Mariola.
Research Findings: Good Practices in Student Retention and the First Year Experience Robert D. Reason Assistant Professor and Research Associate Foundations.
Post-Secondary Coaching & The 4 C’s to College Success: How and Why It Works Dr. Toinette Gunn, VP of Programs 1.
Challenges For Transfer Students at the College of William and Mary Luanna Martins EPPL751: Sociology of (Higher) Education Summer 2011.
What Works: Research-Based Best Practices in Developmental Education A Presentation by Ruth Dalrymple and Marilyn Mays based on Hunter R. Boylan’s work.
© 2015,Gardner Institute for Excellence in Undergraduate Education Enhancing Student Success and Learning With Promising (Evidence-Based) Retention Practices.
ADVOCATING FOR TRANSFER STUDENTS: IS YOUR CAMPUS MEETING THEIR NEEDS? NACADA Annual Conference October 2014 Megan Forbes Cleaver & Leah Howell Pre-Transfer.
And Opportunities for Student Affairs Professionals to Get it Done! Marc Cutright and Bonita Jacobs The National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students.
Latoya Anderson Training and Development 3 Core Programs Diversity in Education EDUC 3008 Technology and Education EDUC 3009 Motivation and Learning EDUC.
The Case for Degree Completion: African American Transfer Students at a Traditionally White Institution Toyia Kiana Younger, Ph.D. Director of Student.
Presented By Patricia Dawson Oregon State University Extension Service.
Chelan Community College Completion Project By: Ardith, Megan, & Michelle.
HLC Criterion Three Primer: Teaching and Learning: Quality, Resources, and Support Thursday, September 24, :40 – 11:40 a.m. Event Center.
The Eugene T. Moore School of Education Working together to promote the growth, education, and social development of children and youth David E. Barrett.
NSSE Data Conversations
Setting Future in Motion
The Heart of Student Success
Dr. Sheryl Zajdowicz and Dr. Rhonda Eaker
Presentation transcript:

And Opportunities to Get it Done! Marc Cutright, Ed.D. University of North Texas National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students 7 th Annual Conference Addison, Texas January 22, 2009

Document in development, dynamic, web- based Document in development, dynamic, web- based Research from Research from Abstracts are drawn from the source, and credited, or are original Abstracts are drawn from the source, and credited, or are original Articles examined for completeness and accuracy of the abstract Articles examined for completeness and accuracy of the abstract Incomplete and in ongoing development. Please pass along suggestions for inclusion. Incomplete and in ongoing development. Please pass along suggestions for inclusion. 2

 What we know  What we don’t know, at least in sufficiency  What the research suggests as opportunities for Student Affairs and their campus allies 3

 More than 60% of all students will graduate from a four-year college with credit from more than one institution.  The trend has been growing  Reasons? Among them, relative costs of community and baccalaureate institutions, Internet mobility, population mobility, promised and delivered personal attention at community colleges. 4

 Transfer “swirl”  Less than half of 4-year transfers are from community colleges  Other patterns include 4-4, 4-2, 2-4-4, etc. 5

 Research generally supports the idea that transfer students do as well or better at 4-year institutions as compared to “native” students. And persistence is better.  Other research suggests an initial period of fall-off— “transfer shock”— and not all research supports equal- or-better accomplishment.  Why? Suggests this may not be a matter of intrinsic student ability, but of quality of institutional/transitional support 6

 The National Survey of Student Engagement and other research suggests that transfer students are less involved in clubs, service, research with faculty, etc.  Why?  Intrinsic to student factors, such as more need to work, older and have families, etc.?  Or an issue of efforts to target transfer students as people with distinct needs, circumstances, beliefs? 7

 Much of the literature is institution-specific, describing model programs and their results  The best programs have academic and co-curricular components that are mutually supportive  Institutions are less successful if they stand alone. The issues of transfer are by definition multi-institutional, and the broadest impact is realized through strong, complex, and diligently pursued institutional partnerships. 8

 The amount of information and facilitation available to first-time students is far more complete, outreach orientated, and web- available than it is for transfer students.  Varies by state and locale, of course, but generally, the info and process procedures are murky. 9

 Where is student voice in the research?  What slips ‘twixt cup and lip, policy to practice, inhibit transfer student access and timely completion?  How do our own assumptions and prejudices, personal and institutional, affect our work with transfer students, and their self definitions?  What do we know about discipline-specific transfer issues?  Who doesn’t transfer, and why? 10

 Most research focuses on such things as analysis of existing student data.  Some research includes surveys of transfer students.  Relatively little in-depth research into the transfer student experience.  Possible approaches: focus groups, individual interviews, surveys based on this qualitative research. And unconventional approaches, e.g. blog analysis. 11

 Anecdotal indicators that transfer as shaped by state policy, and transfer as practiced by receiving institutions, may be very different.  E.g., mandatory acceptance of credit for AA degree holders. Not necessarily applied to degrees. Students may enter with an extensive major in “electives.”  We don’t know the extent of this and related issues.  Necessary for improvement of both policy and practice. 12

Again, anecdotal, but we all “know” that there are some negative assumptions about transfer students: Again, anecdotal, but we all “know” that there are some negative assumptions about transfer students: Came from weak academic environments Came from weak academic environments Failed elsewhere Failed elsewhere Not as skilled Not as skilled Not as committed Not as committed Do our prejudices affect the programs and supports we build? Do transfer students “pick up” on these stereotypes—and wonder if they are true? Do our prejudices affect the programs and supports we build? Do transfer students “pick up” on these stereotypes—and wonder if they are true? Example of Jason Simon’s research on transfer graduate giving as alumni. Preliminary, but counterintuitive. Example of Jason Simon’s research on transfer graduate giving as alumni. Preliminary, but counterintuitive. 13

 Very little research has touched on discipline-specific transfer issues, success rates, exemplary programs, etc.  Can be key tools for a variety of objectives, such as more rapidly expanding the number and diversity of graduates from STEM disciplines 14

 Research has focused on those who DO transfer. What about those who do not?  In Texas, which may not be unusual, only 20% of AA holders even apply to four-year schools. This, despite the fact that Texas universities accept virtually 100% of transfer applicants.  We know some of the factors: $, personal confidence, lack of timely info, place bound, etc. But we don’t know the weights of these factors, or their interplay with each the other or demographic factors. 15

Research: Why do it ?  Research/evaluation is the means by which you improve and refine your efforts  You live in a culture of evidence. No evidence, no support.  When the water hole shrinks, the animals look at one another differently.  External visibility for your institution makes the big dogs happy.  Regional and national recognition of your work is resume bling  It’s your job.

Research: How to start?  Everyone has something to contribute to the research agenda  Don’t be intimidated by the process – you don’t need formal training  Bring your expertise to the table and collaborate with those who know research methods.  Start small, but think big!

 SA professionals have unique access to students.  Campus partnerships with researchers and graduate students, from a variety of fields.  Fits well with contemporary emphasis on the “Scholarship of Teaching and Learning”  Internally targeted evaluation work can be expanded/oriented to external presentation and publication  Replicated, single-institution studies are helpful.  Use of multi-institutional studies, such as consortia and their utilization of NSSE, can be an advance. 18

 20

 What else don’t we know?  How can we find out?  Anything else 21