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Rafael Alvarez - MESA Program Director Theresa Garcia - MESA Engineering Program Director Eric Pamintuan - SPSD Coordinator Raga Bakhiet - MESA Program Director Friday, March 16, 2012
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Culture Need “Learning Culture”
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“Color of the sky”: Student Realities What is Culture?
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Graduates of high schools with low API scores First generation college students Economically disadvantaged Placement into basic skills courses Lack of necessary social and cultural capital
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"the customary beliefs, social forms, and material traits of a racial, religious, or social group" "the characteristic features of everyday existence shared by people in a place or time " "the set of shared attitudes, values, goals, and practices that characterizes an institution or organization "
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Expanding Underrepresented Minority Participation: America's Science and Technology Talent at the Crossroads 1. Academic Support and Social Integration 2. Research/Internship Experiences 3. Professional Development Activities 4. Summer Bridge Programs 5. Mentoring
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Hurtado, S. and Chang, M. (2010). Degrees of Success: Bachelor’s Degree Completion Rates among Initial STEM Majors. Higher Education Institute at UCLA.
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28.5% - Percentage of underrepresented minority groups in national population (2006) 9.1% - Percentage of underrepresented minority groups among college-educated Americans in science and engineering occupations (academic and non-academic) Expanding Underrepresented Minority Participation: America's Science and Technology Talent at the Crossroads (2010). National Academy of Sciences.
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Victims … Blame others Complain Make excuses Repeat ineffective behavior “Have to” do things Pretend their problems belong to others “Try” Give up FAILURE Victims seldom achieve goals Creators … Accept responsibility Take actions Seek solutions Do something new “Choose to” do things Own their problems Commit & follow through Take control of their choices & their lives! SUCCESS Creators often achieve goals Downing, S. (2009). Strategies for Creating Success in College and in Life. Wadsworth, Boston, MA, 6 th Edition.
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Secret to Success (a.k.a. African Village story): “When you find something in life that you want as much as you want to breathe, then you will find the secret to success!” Capstone for life: The purpose for the learning Skills Knowledge Wisdom FREEDOM!
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http://mesa.ucop.edu/ (See “MESA Video 2011”)
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MESA Schools Program ~ 1,600 students San Diego Unified (K–12) – 800 Imperial Valley Unified (K–12) – 800 Community College ~ 365 students San Diego City College – 200 Southwestern College – 165 University (SDSU) ~ 320 students MESA Engineering Program (MEP) - 275 Maximizing Science Potential (MSP) - 45 INDUSTRY or Graduate School Serving over 2,200 students
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Regular Directors’ meetings Sharing of best practices Joint planning Shared Industry Advisory Board Joint grant seeking NSF STEP: STEP Partnership of San Diego California Space Grant Consortium: STEM Outreach focused on Research in the Control of Lagrangian Mixing in Fuel Injector Flows into Supersonic Cross-Stream
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Academic Advising and Individual Academic Plans STEM Course Clustering Academic Excellence Workshops Tutoring College and Career Exploration Transfer Assistance to 4-year Universities (2-year colleges only) Assistance Applying to Graduate Schools (4-year universities only) College Orientation Course Collaboration with Student/Professional Organizations
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Training Academies for Industry Skills Regional Job Shadow Day Scholarships StrengthsQuest Leadership Summit Faculty Advisors STEM Competitions San Diego Region Joint Planning Conference
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As important as classroom teaching Develop tomorrow’s STEM workforce Advisory Board Direct Access to students Paid Interns - SPSD Future hires Industry Standards
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Standards: University Bridging Counseling Academic Support Community Industry Exposure
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Goal 1: Recruitment and Participation Enrollment at each school will increase 10% over previous year
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Goal 2: Recruitment and Participation At least 350 students will be enrolled in the SPSD/MESA program from declared major through transfer or graduation within grant period - 127 SDSU graduates - 107 transfers from SDCC - 96 transfers from SWC - 330 Total graduates or transfers (94% of goal) - More than 580 current active enrollees To meet the goal, 20 students will need to graduate or transfer in the next academic year
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Goal 3: Academic Counseling At least 160 program students will graduate in a STEM major by the end of the grant period. (SDSU only)
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Goal 4: Industry Exposure At least 36 SPSD/MESA students will complete an internship (100+ hours) each year
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Goal 5: University Bridging Activities At least 15 graduating seniors in the SPSD/MESA program will enter STEM graduate study programs by the end of the 5-year grant period. (SDSU only)
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Expanding Underrepresented Minority Participation: America's Science and Technology Talent at the Crossroads (2010 Report) Identifies 5 proven, intensive strategies for student success in STEM MESA/SPSD implements 3 of 5 strategies SPSD II proposes to build on MESA/SPSD best practices and implement remaining 2 strategies (Summer Bridge & Mentoring) in the context of a STEM pipeline (high school-CC-4 year university)
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Lessons: Hardwork Patience Success
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