Advising Students about General Education Requirements

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Math 060 Academic Counseling Presentation Santa Ana College Counseling Department Main Admissions Building, Room S-110 Phone: (714)
Advertisements

Florida’s 2+2 System of Articulation Matthew BouckHigher Education Coordinating Council Interim Director, Office of ArticulationJanuary 28, 2011 Matthew.
Assessing General Education Joe Safdie San Diego Mesa College Joe Safdie San Diego Mesa College.
IT’S WARNING! You are entering an Acronym Rich Environment 1.
Craig Rutan, Curriculum and Instruction Council Chair 2013 Fall Academic Senate Retreat.
The Associate Degree: Recent Revisions and Improvements Presenters Carole Bogue-Feinour Vice Chancellor, Academic Affairs, CCC System Office Lori Gaskin.
10/28/2015 The Latest Updates on Title 5 Issues and Compliant Degrees Janet Fulks, Curriculum Chair Randy Lawson, SACC co-chair CIO, Santa Monica College.
General Education: Developing Outcomes and Assessing Them Carlotta Campbell, College of Alameda, Facilitator Joe Safdie, San Diego Mesa College Maggie.
Members of the CCBC General Education Review Board August 2013 General Education Program at CCBC.
General Education in the CSU Fall Counselor Conference, 2010 Ken O’Donnell Associate Dean, Academic Programs and Policy CSU Office of the Chancellor.
The New Mission Frontier: The Community College Baccalaureate Degree Pilot Review of Resolutions John Stanskas, ASCCC Executive Committee Cheryl Aschenbach,
GENERAL EDUCATION BASICS ASCCC Curriculum Institute July 2016 Bernie Day, Foothill College Dave Degroot, Allan Hancock College Tiffany Tran, Irvine Valley.
Math Graduation Requirements and Alternative Math Pathways Mary Legner, Riverside City College Ginni May, ASCCC Executive Committee Toni Parsons, San Diego.
Your Articulation Officer: Getting Out of the Office and into the Classroom Corinna Evett Transfer, Articulation, and Student Services Committee Member,
Achieving the Dream to Strategic Plan
Letitia Senechal Miller, MJC Articulation Officer
Effective Practices for Educational Program Development, AB 1985, and the ASCSU QRTF—What are they, what has been done, and where are they going? Randy.
Quantitative Reasoning Task Force
Quantitative Reasoning Instruction—Serving Students with Innovation and Inter-Segmental Collaboration Cheryl Aschenbach, Basic Skills Committee Chair,
Placing courses in local GE patterns: Models for Effective Practice
Curriculum and Accreditation
Curriculum and Accreditation
AB 705 CMC3 Fall 2017 Conference, December 8-9, Monterey, CA
Ginni May, ASCCC Area A Representative
Completion of Educational Pathways
Quantitative Reasoning – An Update
Letitia Senechal, MJC Articulation Officer
Implementation requirements for ab 705
AB 705 and You: Your Program and Your Students – Noncredit, ESL, and Basic Skills Ginni May, Area A Representative, Math and Quantitative Reasoning Task.
What we know about ab 705 Cheryl Aschenbach, North Representative
Guided Pathways Hot Topics
STEM Supervisor Columbia High School
Reimagined Pathways in Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning
Faculty Role in AP Credit
Importance of Local Associate Degrees
Student Success Saddleback College.
General Education in the CSU Fall Counselor Conference, 2008
Math and Quantitative Reasoning Task Force Recommendations
Craig Rutan, ASCCC Secretary John Stanskas, ASCCC President
AB 705 – Where are we now and how do we do it?
Riverside City College Guided Pathways Update
AB 705 Curriculum Updates MJC Math Fall 2018.
Fall 2018 California State University Updates
Rebecca Eikey, ASCCC Area C Representative
AB 705 Implementation requirements
ACCJC Standards Adopted june 2014.
AB 705 and Its Implementation Plans in Mathematics
Faculty Leadership and the Role of the ASCCC
Randy Beach, South Representative Marie Boyd, Chaffey College
“Program Mapping 101" Presenters:
AB 705 – Getting ready for fall 2019
Select English/ESL and Mathematics/Quantitat ive Reasoning Pathways
Santa Ana College AB 705 Guided Pathways & Equity
Guided Pathways Work Plan
Fall 2018 California State University Updates
Rebecca Eikey, ASCCC Area C Rep Craig Rutan, ASCCC Secretary
Fall 2018 Overview from Curriculum Regional Meeting (11/17)
What we know about ab 705 Cheryl Aschenbach, North Representative
Aligning with Transfer Institutions
Impact of AB 705 and Guided Pathways on Part-Time Faculty
Maximizing Possibility
Math Course Registration
AB 705 and Its Implementation Plans in Mathematics
Examining the Results of Student Placement in the World of AB 705
IMPLICATIONS OF CHANGING PREREQUISITES (AB 705, Prerequisites, & Articulation) Aimee Tran, Saddleback College, ASCCC Curriculum Committee, Articulation.
AB 705 Data Revision Project
Credit degrees and certificates
Course Substitutions and Reciprocity
Raul Arambula, Dean, CCCCO Dolores Davison, ASCCC Vice President
Articulation ESSENTIALS
Presentation transcript:

Advising Students about General Education Requirements Transfer, Articulation & Student Services Committee (TASSC)

General Education for the AA and AS Title 5 Definition Section 55063, section B Minimum of 18 semester units (27 quarter) Minimum of 3 semester units in the areas of natural sciences, social and behavioral sciences, humanities, language and rationality Ethnic Studies will be offered in at least one of the required areas At the local level, colleges develop GE packages based on the following factors: Title 5, Accreditation Standards Requirements, SLOs for GE and ILOs (local determination), Local Community Needs, Possible alignment with IGETC and CSU Breadth, local definitions of GE areas as locally determined criteria for a course to be included in a given GE Area Not all colleges use “ILOs”. Some use “ISLOs” and some nothing like that at all. It is a local determination. (Ginni)

General Education Transfer Requirements: CSU/IGETC At least 39 units of GE for CSU GE Breadth Pattern 34 semester units for IGETC Pattern (UC system) 37 semester units for IGETC / CSU Pattern (CSU and/or UC) Articulation agreements are determined to allow CCC courses to be accepted as GE at a CSU or UC or other four year institutions GE relationship between CCC and CSU/IGETC was established in the California Higher Education Master Plan (1960) I have not seen the 33 semester unit requirement for CSU-STEM and IGETC STEM at 31. I will look it up (Ginni) There is a difference between transferable courses and articulated courses, which are all accepted.

Philosophical Basis for General Education Why do we have GE? Per title 5, Section 55061 general education: Symbolizes a successful attempt on the part of the college to lead students to complete patterns of learning experiences designed to develop certain capabilities and global perspectives. Is designed to introduce students to a broad array of viewpoints through which they may comprehend the modern world. Helps students become lifelong learners who can think critically, analyze issues, and make reasoned judgments in the spirit of open mindedness and personal growth.

Pragmatic Basis for General Education What is the value of the education we offer? Courses are linked together. Provides and enhances skills in the workplace. Education supports students in their roles outside of school and work. Most importantly, GE should lead to a better self-understanding and understanding of others. Prepares students to become well-informed and productive citizens in society. Student Minute Journal And prepare students to become well-informed and productive citizens in society??? (Ginni)

Hot Topics GE Credit and Advanced Placement Guided Pathways Quantitative reasoning AB 705

GE Credit and AP AB 1985 (Williams, 2016) Students must be awarded credit in the GE area for an AP score of 3 or higher as identified in the CCC GE AP List AP credit for a course in the major is locally determined Faculty should be engaged in the conversations “Faculty Primacy and AP Credit” Rostrum Article

Guided Pathways Creates a highly structured approach to student success Provides students with a set of clear course-taking patterns that promotes better enrollment decisions Integrates support services What does this mean for students? More clarity and guidance, greater likelihood for completion, improved opportunities for transfer and career placement.

Guided Pathways Faculty Involvement Faculty must be involved from the beginning, areas of focus of guided pathways fall within the purview of academic senate and faculty, support from administration, keep faculty engaged and involved through committees and governance structure. Conversations around General Education are Critical What do faculty believe to be the value of GE? Which math sequence is right for the program? Can general education courses double count for majors? How do GE course outcomes and objectives align with major requirements? We want to be careful that we aren’t cheerleaders for GP. Senate position is nuanced wth a focus on making GP unique to your campus and protecting governance structures and processes

AB 705 Requires districts/colleges to maximize probability that a student will enter and complete transfer-level coursework in English and Mathematics within a one-year timeframe. Using high school coursework, high school grades and high school grade point average ESL students will enter and complete degree transfer requirements in English within a 3 year timeframe. Students who seek a goal other than transfer, college must maximize opportunity that a student will enter and complete the required college-level coursework in English and Mathematics within a one-year timeframe. District/college are authorized to require students to enroll into additionally concurrent support. Support must increase the likelihood of passing the transfer-level English or mathematics course.

Quantitative Reasoning From CSU Quantitative Reasoning Task Force Recommendations: The ability to reason quantitatively is a stable combination of skills and practices involving: (i) the ability to read, comprehend, interpret, and communicate quantitative information in various contexts in a variety of formats; (ii) the ability to reason with and make inferences from quantitative information in order to solve problems arising in personal, civic, and professional contexts; (iii) the ability to use quantitative methods to assess the reasonableness of proposed solutions to quantitative problems; and (iv) the ability to recognize the limits of quantitative methods. Quantitative reasoning depends on the methods of computation, logic, mathematics, and statistics Reference: https://www.asccc.org/sites/default/files/V.%20G.%20QRTF%20Final%20Report%2008-01-2016.pdf

CSU Executive Order 1100 CSU no longer to offer pre-baccalaureate level courses (Intermediate Algebra The prerequisite is redundant with CSU admission requirements First time CSU freshman are required to meet A-G admission requirements (Algebra II*) and CCC admission requirements (CSU GE Breadth Subarea B4) Prerequisite not required consistently in CSU/ creating inequities when all CCCs required it College Algebra or courses “similar to” college algebra and higher are still required for STEM courses No other GE Area or discipline in system-wide policy requires a prerequisite *Integrated Math-3 Years covers the content of Algebra II

Resources Assist.org College Source Online Database of Catalogs OnBase (Local database) California Intersegmental Articulation Council (CIAC)