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Tulsa Community Colleges Achieving the Dream Presented at the 2010 OUCEC Conference October 26, 2010
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Multi-year, national initiative Increase student success Cohort population First-time, full- or part-time degree-seeking freshmen ▪ Low income, minority, first generation Data-informed processes Institutional and state policies
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Goal 1. Successfully complete courses Goal 2. Advance from remedial to credit-bearing Goal 3. Enroll in and successfully complete gateway courses Goal 4. Enroll from one semester to the next Goal 5. Earn degrees and/or certificates
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Student focus groups/faculty & staff successful first-time freshmen Cohort population: successful first-time freshmen 12 focus groups; 101 total students Research Question: What barriers or challenges did you experience in persisting to your second semester?
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College-wide collaboration: Common course objectives Common formative assessments ▪ Pre- and post-assessment (Learning & Study Skills Inventory) ▪ Written self-reflection Lead teachers/mentors Dedicated, robust website of faculty resources College-wide training for faculty
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Enrolled in SASDid not enroll in SAS *Significant at alpha <.01
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Enrolled in SASDid not enroll in SAS *Significant at alpha <.01
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Plan a college-wide faculty training program Distribute SAS manual Update SAS website Replace self-reflection writing exercise w/ time-management calendar Discuss educational planning unit Pursue alternative delivery format
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1 st Semester Persistence Fall-to-fall persistence “C” or higher course completion Full Cohort75%50%61% All Male Students71%46%57% African American Male Students 56%25%31% Target Population: African American males Institutional cohort data, fall 2009
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Persistence: “What barriers or challenges did you experience in persisting to your second semester?” All successful first-time freshmen African American male students eligible 7 focus groups; 109 total students Data analysis released April 2, 2010
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(24 barriers) AA Male Experience (17 barriers) Institutional (69 barriers) Managing College Life and Goals
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Mentoring Intervention Design Addresses specific student-identified barriers Anticipates specific target outcomes Builds in assessment to determine if intervention reduces student barriers
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From ATD A structure to frame the work is essential: 4- component process ATD “Framing Document” provided 5 specific goals and an analysis of what the primary institutional and state regulating bodies should provide to meet the goals Powerful national community of change agents No one answer works
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For the college To effect systemic change, the process must be transparent and collaborative involve as many of the stakeholders as possible recognize the importance of human aspect of collaborative change include mutual respect, the humility to listen and learn, open conversation, tolerance for new ideas, an ability to focus on working the problem
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For Institutional Research Data-informed decisions require a panoply of data types and investigations Data gathering and analysis must be timely to be useful The 4-component process transforms the function and priorities of IR The IR office needs to be fully staffed to meet the demands of data-informed decision-making processes
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For intervention teams The collaborative process is time consuming and messy. Structuring an intervention to target specific barriers with outcomes that are empirically verifiable requires a steep and ongoing learning process. Stakeholders are enormously creative, innovative, and committed to student success.
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Communication Community outreach Curriculum Alignment: high schools P20, the engine for profound change 4-component process to verify, assess, and revise curriculum alignment and academic standards
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Tulsa Community Colleges Achieving the Dream Presented at the 2010 OUCEC Conference October 26, 2010
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