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Partnering for Student Success: Cradle to Career November 4, 2010 Portland State University Nancy L. Zimpher Chancellor, The State University of New York
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The College Board 55% by 2025: A Big Hairy Audacious Goal* By 2025, 55% of Americans between the ages of 25-34 will hold a post-secondary degree. *From Built to Last, Collins and Porras, 2004 2
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What stands in our way? 3
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Nationally, for every 100 ninth grade students… 68 students graduate from high school four years later… 40 students immediately enter college… 27 students are still enrolled in their second year… and 18 students graduate with either an associate’s degree within three years or a bachelor’s degree within six years. Source: National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, 2004 The Leaking Student Pipeline 4
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The Leaking Teacher Pipeline National cost of teacher turnover: $7.3 billion Teacher attrition has grown by 50% over the past decade National rate of attrition: 17% Urban school attrition rate: 20% Chicago: teacher dropout costs $86 million each year Low school performance and high poverty rate correlated with high teacher turnover rate in Chicago and Milwaukee 5 Source: The High Cost of Teacher Turnover, NCTAF, 2007
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No Unified System of Education Early Childhood P-12 Higher Education Community- Based Organizations Business and Industry Government Foundations Non-Profits Social Services 6
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A Divisive Public Debate 7
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So how do we move the dial? 8
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Nationally Visible Reform Efforts 9
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But Are They Systemic? 10 Completion at Every Stage In order to reach the goal of 55 percent of 25- to 34-year-olds obtaining an associate degree or higher by the year 2025, the commission has put forth a 10-part recommendation that is aimed at strengthening the educational pipeline at every stage throughout a student’s trajectory from preschool to college completion. The College Completion Agenda 2010 Progress Report
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A Way Forward: Taking Community-based, Cradle-to-Career Partnerships to Scale 11
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Every Student Graduates, No Exceptions Successful Students. Productive Citizens. Thriving Cities. 12
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EVERY student in the region will: Be Prepared for school through early childhood education Be Supported inside and outside school Succeed academically Enroll in some form of college Graduate and enters a career MISSION: Empowering every child in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky to succeed from birth through some form of college and into a meaningful career. 13
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Student’s Roadmap to Success: Critical Benchmarks and Transition Years 14
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Establishing a Network of Cradle to Career Partnerships 15
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Implementation and Development Sites Establishing Urban Universities as Anchors for Transformational Birth through Career Partnerships Arizona State University Mesa, Arizona California State University – East Bay Hayward, California University of Houston Houston, Texas Indiana University/ Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico Portland State University Portland, Oregon California State University – Fresno Fresno, California Strive –University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio University of Memphis Memphis, Tennessee Purdue University Indianapolis, Indiana Implementation Site (EPIN) Development Site (EPDN) 16
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5 Attributes of Successful Systemic Partnerships: A Theory of Action 17
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Successful Students Productive Citizens Thriving Cities Successful Students Productive Citizens Thriving Region “Envision our region—the dynamic and diverse counties and communities of the greater San Francisco East Bay Area—as characterized by successful students, productive citizens and thriving cities” Support the children and youth in greater Houston cradle to career What’s the Big Idea? Vision 18
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Early Childhood K-12 Teacher Unions Who’s at the table? Convening Power Colleges and Universities Community-based Organizations Corporate and Business 19
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How can we build capacity? An Organizational Action Plan 20
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Evidence-based Interventions How will we measure success? Strive Six Sigma: Define exactly what we want to do. Measure what improvements need to occur to achieve our goal. Analyze factors that determine outcomes. Improve current strategy and/or fill gaps with new or existing resources. Continue to improve on the action plans. 21
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How to show continuous improvement? Accountability 22
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What if the nation’s largest public university system took this model to scale? 23
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SUNY’s Strategic Plan 24
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The Power of SUNY: SUNY will be a key engine of revitalization for New York State’s economy and enhance the quality of life for the state’s citizens 25
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Six Big Ideas SUNY and the Vibrant Community SUNY and the Entrepreneurial Century SUNY and the Seamless Education Pipeline SUNY and an Energy- Smart New York SUNY and a Healthier New York SUNY and the World 26
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SUNY and The Seamless Education Pipeline SUNY Urban-Rural Teacher Corps Cradle-to-CareerSuccess SUNY Works 27
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A Distributed Network of 64 Campuses 28
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Cradle-to-Career Success 29
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Blue Ribbon Panel on Clinical Preparation and Partnerships for Improved Student Learning A Unified Vision SUNY Urban-Rural Teacher Corps A Unified Profession 30
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A Call to Action Washington DC Press Club - November 16, 2010 31
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Martin Luther King, Jr. “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” 32
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Partnering for Student Success: Cradle to Career November 4, 2010 Portland State University Nancy L. Zimpher Chancellor, The State University of New York
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