Mark Wade Lieu, ASCCC President Jane Patton, ASCCC Vice President Janet Fulks, ASCCC Curriculum Chair 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ACE-Achieving Classroom Excellence.  2005: Achieving Classroom Excellence Act (SB 982) ◦ Established the ACE Task Force and guiding principles  2006:
Advertisements

ACCUPLACER R Wins Approval Again in California Ron Gordon Gordon Associates ACCUPLACER R Conference Las Vegas, 2005.
Early Assessment Program: A Valid Solution for CCC Math and English Placement? KC Greaney, Director Jeanne Fadelli, Research Analyst Santa Rosa Junior.
Academic Senate 101 You Make It Happen! Catherine Cox President Mission College Academic Senate August, 2007 Adapted from ASCCC 101, presented at the ASCCC.
2010 ASCCC Curriculum Institute Santa Clara Marriott July 8-10, 2010 Navigating by the Stars: Content Review… Zerryl Becker, Curriculum Committee Richard.
Gordon Associates Why Do We Do What We Do, And How Do We Know if it’s Working? By Ron Gordon, EdD.
Dual Enrollment Options Presented by the GCISD Counseling Department
Slide 1 Jail, Prison, or Parole? Assigning Courses to Disciplines Kevin Parker, Michelle Pilati, Randy Lawson.
Intra-District Articulation Board of Trustees Study Session Wednesday, January 24, 2007.
Division of Florida Colleges Update
18 Units in the Major: Too Many or Too Few? Beth Smith, Chair, Counseling Library Faculty Issues Committee Janice Johnson, Grossmont College Miles Vega,
AB1725 Curses and Blessings: Pre-requisites and Basic Skills Alignment CurriculumCommittee Cristela Solorio-Ruiz, Rio Hondo College, Student Nabil Abu-Ghazaleh,
COMPASS National and Local Norming Sandra Bolt, M.S., Director Student Assessment Services South Seattle Community College February 2010.
BY Karen Liu, Ph. D. Indiana State University August 18,
The Board of Governors Motion on Assessment: An Update Mark Wade Lieu Academic Senate for California Community Colleges.
A Presentation to Early Childhood Educators Spring 2010 The Academic Senate + You.
2010 Faculty Leadership Institute Hot Topics Beth Smith, Treasurer Richard Mahon, Area D.
IT’S WARNING! You are entering an Acronym Rich Environment 1.
Implementing Systemwide Advanced Placement (AP) Equivalencies Academic Senate for the California Community Colleges Spring Plenary; April 18, 2008 Dave.
Equivalence at MPC Goals: 1.Articulate to the MPC community the expectations for granting equivalency to faculty applicants 2.Clearly define roles and.
Florida A&M University Tallahassee, Florida October 22, 2003 Dr. R. E. LeMon Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs 1 Florida Board of Governors.
Oregon’s New Diploma Requirements: Oregon’s New Diploma Requirements: What You’ll Need to Know 2008 Superintendent’s Summer Institute August 4-6, 2008.
Craig Rutan, Curriculum and Instruction Council Chair 2013 Fall Academic Senate Retreat.
Prerequisites and Content Review ASCCC Curriculum Committee July 2011.
Kale Braden, ASCCC North Representative Michelle Grimes-Hillman, ASCCC Curriculum Committee Chair James Todd, Interim Vice-President, Student Services,
Criminal Intent – Innate or Learned? Why We Do What We Do Ian Walton and Michelle Pilati.
Janet Fulks, ASCCC Curriculum Chair Jane Patton, ASCCC President 1.
Prerequisites Changed My Life ASCCC Fall Plenary Session November 2013 Greg Burchett, Riverside City College John Stanskas, San Bernardino Valley College.
California Community Colleges Adopting New Prerequisites Under the New Title 5 Requirements ASCCC 2012 Spring Curriculum Regionals May 5—Woodland College.
Janet Fulks, Chair, ASCCC Curriculum Committee Jane Patton, President, ASCCC Michelle Pilati, Vice President, ASCCC 1.
ASCCC REGIONAL CURRICULUM MEETING Foothill College Mt. San Antonio College
The New Mission Frontier: The Community College Baccalaureate Degree Pilot John Stanskas, ASCCC Executive Committee Jolena Grande, Cypress College Jackie.
What is the Standard for Baccalaureate Level Quantitative Reasoning? Starting the Intersegmental Conversation Ginni May, ASCCC Executive Committee John.
Placement of Courses in Disciplines Dan Crump, American River College Michelle Grimes-Hillman, Mt San Antonio College ASCCC Curriculum Institute, July.
© 2014, Florida Department of Education. All Rights Reserved. Student Unit Record Data Use Division of Florida Colleges December 8, 2015.
Looking at Successful Student Trajectories Janet Fulks, Bakersfield Colleges.
Class of 2022 High Ability Mathematics Parent Night.
Implementing Content Review Beth Smith, Grossmont College Chair, Curriculum Committee David Morse, Long Beach College Curriculum Committee.
Creating a Requisite Skills or Advisory Preparation Matrix Presenters: Edward Karpp (Dean of Research, Planning, and Grants) Terrence Yu (Research Analyst)
Minimum Qualifications and the Disciplines List Michelle Sampat, Mt. San Antonio College Lisa Cook, Laney College John Stanskas, ASCCC Executive Committee.
The New Mission Frontier: The Community College Baccalaureate Degree Pilot Review of Resolutions John Stanskas, ASCCC Executive Committee Cheryl Aschenbach,
© 2014, Florida Department of Education. All Rights Reserved. Developmental Education Accountability Connections Conference 2015 Division.
Area of Emphasis (AOE) Discipline Input Group Meetings Spring 2016 Michelle Pilati.
End of Course Exams  In February, 2007 the Missouri State Board of Education approved End of Course (EOC) exams.  WHY?
Pre-requisites, Co-Requisites, and Advisory Preparation
Assessment of Student Course Competency Readiness: Ensuring proper placement of students Andrew LaManque, Associate Vice President of Instruction, Foothill.
ACADEMIC SENATE FOR CALIFORNIA COMMUNITES COLLEGES
Multiple measures and accurate student placement
Ginni May, ASCCC Area A Representative
Completion of Educational Pathways
Pre-requisites, Co-Requisites, and Advisory Preparation
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
Faculty Role in AP Credit
AB 705 – Where are we now and how do we do it?
Prerequisites and Content Review
Assigning Courses to Disciplines: Finding the Right Map
AB 705 Implementation requirements
A Conversation about Prerequisites
AB 705 – Getting ready for fall 2019
10+1 Governance and Union Issues: Similarities and Differences
Santa Ana College AB 705 Guided Pathways & Equity
ACADEMIC SENATE FOR CALIFORNIA COMMUNITES COLLEGES
What we know about ab 705 Cheryl Aschenbach, North Representative
Noncredit Prerequisites and Corequisites
Cheryl Aschenbach, ASCCC Secretary
IMPLICATIONS OF CHANGING PREREQUISITES (AB 705, Prerequisites, & Articulation) Aimee Tran, Saddleback College, ASCCC Curriculum Committee, Articulation.
Consider the Source – Deciphering Fact from Fiction: Implementation Requirements vs Options for AB 705 Marty Alvarado, Executive Vice Chancellor Educational.
Presentation transcript:

Mark Wade Lieu, ASCCC President Jane Patton, ASCCC Vice President Janet Fulks, ASCCC Curriculum Chair 1

“Quiz” yourself! 2

Most institutions of higher education in the U.S.A. create prerequisites based upon faculty expertise and content review, without statistical validation. a. True b. False 3

The MALDEF case resulted in a verdict requiring CCC’s to justify and validate prerequisites through content review, statistical analysis and comparability with other similar courses and those requirements. a. True b. False 4

It is difficult to find data that suggest that having college level reading or writing increases student success in transferable general education courses. a. True b. False 5

CSUs and UCs do not require basic skills prerequisites. a. True b. False 6

Students oppose applying prerequisites to courses. a. True b. False 7

 RP Letter  Basic Skills Initiative  Board of Governor’s Motion on Assessment Task Force  Assessment Action Planning Group (APG)  Legislative Interest 8

 Prerequisites Pre-1990  The Role of MALDEF  The Revisionist 90s  Where we are today 9

10

“... a condition of enrollment that a student is required to meet in order to demonstrate current readiness for enrollment in a course or educational program.” Title 5 § 55003

“... a condition of enrollment consisting of a course that a student is required to simultaneously take in order to enroll in another course.”

“... a condition of enrollment that a student is advised, but not required, to meet before or in conjunction with enrollment in a course or educational program.”

STANDARD RESEARCH METHODS : 1. a correlation coefficient such as the Pearson r 2. a matrix or four-cell table and accompanying chi-square 3. a matrix or four-cell analysis showing net increase in accuracy From Good Practice for the Implementation of Prerequisites p.5 14

Goals: 1. Minimize students who pass without the prerequisite 2. Significant chi-square, typically > 3.84 (here P 2 = 60, significant at the 0.05 level, 3. Maximize right/wrong ratio, typically $ 2:1 (here 90:10 = 9:1), 4. Maximize incremental gain in success, typically by $ 10% (here before applying the prerequisite 67/100 = 67%, after applying the prerequisite 66/75 = 88%; 21% gain). From Good Practice for the Implementation of Prerequisites p.5 15

i. Involvement of faculty with appropriate expertise; ii. Consideration of course objectives set by relevant department(s); iii. Based on a detailed course syllabus and outline of record, tests, related instructional materials, course format, type and number of examinations, and grading criteria; iv. Specification of the body of knowledge and/or skills deemed necessary; (continued... ) 16

v. Identification and review of knowledge and/or measure skills identified under iv. vi. Matching of the knowledge and skills in the targeted course and those developed or measured by the prerequisite or corequisite (i.e., the course or assessment identified under v.); and vii. Maintain documentation that the above steps were taken. From The Model District Policy on Prerequisites, Corequisites, and Advisories on Recommended Preparation page 5 Board of Governors September

 Content Review  Plus: data collection and analysis  Plus assessment instrument (approved by the Chancellor’s Office)  Plus validated cut-off scores  Plus multiple measures  Plus disproportionate impact study 18

Courses in communication or computational skills outside discipline...

Content Review  Plus: data collection and analysis  Plus disproportionate impact study The highest level Example: Math 4A as a Prerequisite for Physics 2A

Assessment for Placement (for use within the same discipline)...

 Content Review  Plus assessment instrument (approved by the Chancellor’s Office)  Plus validated cut-off scores  Plus multiple measures  Plus disproportionate impact study Example: Score on placement or ESL 63 as prerequisite for ESL 64

Limitation on Enrollment – Performance courses...

 Other courses are available to meet degree/certificate requirements  Plus disproportionate impact study Example: Audition for Dance 22

1.Assessment of student proficiencies benefits colleges and students’ success 2.Absence of clear minimum expectations does a disservice to students, our institutions, and the state 3.Establishment of prerequisites should be fair and just ---with appeal process per Title 5 continued... 26

1.Faculty have an obligation to establish a learning environment that is conducive to the success of all students. 2. Validation processes that are dependent upon student failure are contrary to aiding their students to achieve their academic goals. 3.College-level courses should expect and require students to use and further develop college-level skills. continued... 27

7. Prerequisites decisions should be made based on academic considerations, not programmatic or enrollment/apportionment impact. 8. There should be easily identifiable course options for all students – regardless of their skill level. 28

Psychology Success Rates  75.2% with college level reading  Only 49.0% without -- from Bakersfield College Total=2,523 Fall 2001-Summer

ECONOMICS SUCCESS RATES  87% with Intermediate Algebra  47% with Elementary Algebra  22% with Pre-algebra -- from Foothill College total=303 Fall 2008 only 30

Two reading possibilities for transfer level history were explored: 1. Successful completion of reading graduation requirement 2. One level below The results… from Chaffey College 31

 Validation  MALDEF Case  Fears  Concerns for Our Students 32

List the pros and cons :  Option #1 Content Review (local)  Option #2 Statewide Prerequisites (for certain courses)  Record ideas on the worksheet 33

 Academic Senate Spring Plenary Session Resolutions  Assessment APG Recommendations  Share with local faculty 34

35