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Published byStuart Short Modified over 8 years ago
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Today’s Objectives GPS as part of the completion agenda WHAT Data, state mandates, student need WHY The pilot at NLC, and beyond HOW
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The Completion Agenda Texas Completes Pathways Completion by Design Complete College America Achieving the Dream Texas Success Center American Association of Community Colleges Community College Research Center, Columbia University
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Alliance Member Arkansas Colorado Connecticut District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Montana Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Nevada New Mexico Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming 36 Members DC
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Too Few Students ever Graduate 34% of FT students pursuing a bachelor’s degree graduate on time. About half graduate in 6 years. 10% of FT associate degree students graduate on time. 25% graduate in 3 years.
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Too Few Students ever Graduate Taking too much time Taking too many credits Spending too much money Not graduating
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NLC Credit Students – Fall 2015 Headcount -11,280 Hispanic – 37.6% White – 34.5% African American – 19.3% Asian – 13.8%
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NLC Credit Students – Fall 2015 PT – 8,872 (78.7%) Transfer/Undecided – 11,488 (99.6%) 71% take at least one developmental course FTIC - 2,114 (18.7%)
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NLC Credit Students – Fall 2015 Low-income – 56% First Generation – 62%
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FTIC - Cohorts Associate Degree within 4 years – 4.9% Associate Degree and Transferred – 2.3% 15 hrs. within 1 Academic Yr. – 30%
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CCA’s “Game Changers” Performance Funding Co-requisite remediation Full-Time is 15 Structured Schedules Guided Pathways to Success
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Community Alliance Partnership Complete College America Lumina Foundation Commit2dallas North Lake College
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Guided Pathways Defined Highly structured student experiences encourage completion by: Establishing clear roadmaps to students’ end goals Intake processes that help students clarify goals for college and career On-ramps to programs of study for developmental students Embedding advising, progress tracking, feedback, and support throughout a students’ journey
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Elements of Guided Pathways Whole programs of Study Informed Choice Default Pathways Academic Road Maps Milestone Courses Structured Schedules Intrusive Advising Workforce Connection
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NLC GPS Pilot Launch pilot – Fall 2016 FTIC Cohort Advising Protocols Career services Articulation Agreements Academic Maps
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Today’s Focus Understanding Why Students “Drift” Catalogs are difficult to understand General Education requirements are confusing Students don’t understand course prerequisites and/or course sequencing Course withdrawals, repeats and failures Changing majors late in academic career Creating a streamlined, easy-to-understand pathway to completion
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From here:
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To Here: “Something to post on the refrigerator” - Dr. Dhanfu E. Elston, Complete College America
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Implementation Examples Queensborough CC (CUNY): http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/academics/index.html http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/academics/index.html Middlesex CC (MA): https://www.middlesex.mass.edu/advising/downl oads/maps/bt.pdf https://www.middlesex.mass.edu/advising/downl oads/maps/bt.pdf
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The Process Academic Maps developed No changes to curriculum Semester-by-semester sequencing of courses Completion in two years Identification of academic and non-academic milestones Faculty have final approval of all maps
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NLC Implementation Plan The Blazer Guided Pathways Pilot Cohort as determined by the GPS Planning Committee would be defined as FTIC students already enrolled for Fall 2016 (August 1-20). They may be FT or PT college-ready students. EPC Senior Staff will have identified their students during peak registration. Then they will call students and identify themselves as their Advisor for the 2016-2017 Academic Year. The Advisor will send the Career Assessment via My Plan to each student and track completion of the assessment. (SB 162 Statewide Developmental Plan, Goal 4) The Student will have until spring semester to select a pathway.
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How to identify students
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Milestones Completion of the Career Assessment via My Plan. Initial appointment to discuss Educational Plan (major, Institute, Career pathway, fall semester schedule). September: 1st week of class, make the student has books, and has identified on campus resources. Attend a required Career Assessment Workshop. October: Ensure the student understands their Career Assessment result to commit to a Pathway Institute. November: Spring Semester Planning. Once a student commits to Pathway Institute, a dedicated map can be identified for that student. December: If the student has not already identified and Institute this is the time to explore those options again.
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Values Assessment can be used to identify other milestones for students; like joining a club organization related to their major, running for office, getting involved on campus.
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My Plan & Pathways
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Definition of Success The outcomes the Educational Planning Center will achieve for the Fall Semester August- December are the following: 70% of Pilot group to complete the Career Assessment via My Plan 70% will attend the required Career Assessment Workshop at the beginning of the semester. 70% of Pilot group will identify with one of the five Institutes: Humanities & Arts, Business & Industry, Multi- Disciplinary, Public Service and STEM.
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Measuring Success
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Maintaining Focus EPC Senior staff will lead the work for the GPS pilot Key Faculty must be identified to pair with each Academic Advisor lead for each Institute. Continue work on Academic Maps for more disciplines, using the transfer information provided on top transfer school and majors for DCCCD students. EPC Senior Staff will meet weekly or biweekly as needed for training or progress check Current GPS committee must expand to include other areas to start planning Fall 2017
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