LPC Student Demographics and Outcomes Data Prepared by the LPC Office of Institutional Research and Planning December 2009 Dr. Amber Machamer
LPC Student Demographics and Outcomes Data Become statistically familiar with our students Sources Preparation Demographics/background characteristics
Understanding Data Limitations Mostly Self-Reported Data From application or Survey Fall 2009 Data is not Final or Census….it’s an “M” run so it’s not a true comparison to other semesters
Enrollment of Feeder High Schools HS Grad Year LPC Semester Number of Grads* Number New Enrollments at LPC Grad year the previous Spring** % of grads who attended LPC the Fall after HS Graduation Number of New Enrollments at LPC of any Grad Year** % of New LPC Students who graduated HS any year Number of All New Students to LPC** Fall %49444% Fall %51245% Fall %55149% Fall %70951% Fall %70751% Fall %77954% Fall %78553% Fall %83455% Fall %81152% Fall %90750% Fall %91151% Fall %92652%1767
Student Demographics LPC has a large proportion of “traditional” students (young, transfer directed, full-time) Student Preparation High school students expect high quality education for transfer and workforce training But also need remedial academic and leaning skills support Summary
Shifting Forces: Nature of Learning Traditional Instructor provides Information Student responsible for mastery Millenial Students have access to information Students expect instructor to help them master the information Instructor as source of information Instructor as learning coach
Shifting Forces: Nature of Learning Instructor is valued as source of information Instructor valued as learning coach What would this mean for professional development, delivery methods, curriculum, pedagogy, classroom management?