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Articulation 2 Ways Bernie Day, Articulation, Foothill College Jane Patton, ASCCC; Mission College Ron Selge, Dean, System Office
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Did you know? 2/3 of CSU graduates and 1/3 of UC graduates began at a community college. Upon transferring they obtained GPAs equal to, or better than, “native” UC or CSU students. In 2004, UC officials indicated that 25% of UC-eligible high school graduates had at least one community college course on their transcript Pocket Profiles, 2006 (from CCLC)
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Articulation --defined Variations: 1.A formal, written agreement that identifies a course or sequence at a sending college that is comparable to or acceptable in lieu of a requirement at receiving institution. 2.Alignment of course content 3.Sequencing 4.Advanced placement
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Two ways: Between community colleges and universities (public and private) Between high schools and colleges –typically in vocational areas – can take various forms
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Articulation Basics Why? Who? When? How?
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Faculty responsibilities for articulation Discipline faculty are the only qualified persons to determine course comparability Articulation Officers facilitate the processes
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Curriculum Committee’s role Ensuring course outlines, catalogs have correct designations. Supporting discipline faculty to ensure they understand and fulfill articulation obligations.
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Articulation initiatives with universities CAN C-ID IMPAC LDTP
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CAN was canned CAN designations can be maintained for 2 years after a new LDTP descriptor is in place. Assume we can still note them on our documents for 2 years...
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C-ID = Course Identification Number A proposal that improves upon CAN –a supra-numbering system –a response to mandates and needs –course descriptors for use by postsecondary institutions and CCC students
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C-ID: a response to mandates & needs Legislation (SB 450, SB 851, SB 1415) MOUs Unmet needs of students, articulation officers, counselors, staff, universities Articulation processes would be greatly simplified with C-ID.
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C-ID fills a void Inter-segmental transfer Intra-segmental transfer Vocational courses Many gaps left by LDTP
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IMPAC Intersegmental Major Preparation Articulated Curriculum 33 disciplines met 12 interdisciplinary discussions held 2,290 faculty participated CAN (167) and LDTP descriptors were written/revised SciGETC developed
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LDTP = Lower Division Transfer Pattern CSU Project (SB 1785 & MOU) Goal: to improve transfer into majors Gives highest priority for admission Plan: to take effect Fall 2007 First 30 majors are to be completed by June 2006 Approved courses will have a TCSU number Status
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Articulation with high schools
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System Office Secondary / Postsecondary Linkage Projects 2+2 (precursor) 2+2+2 (precursor) Middle College Early College High School Concurrent Enrollment Tech Prep School-to-Career (federal name STW) SB 70, Scott (Governor’s Initiative on Economic Development and Career Technical Education)
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Tech Prep Many facets Contextual curriculum Work-based learning Consortium based Secondary / postsecondary or Secondary / apprenticeship linkages Professional Development
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Tech Prep 80 consortia, self organized Very local in scope Funding levels inconsistent with charge (~ $80,000 annual per college)
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Governor’s Initiative on Economic Development and Career Technical Education Chaptered into Ed Code 88532 CCC System Office ---developing many projects Academic Senate will develop one project-- to develop H.S. articulation SB 70, Scott
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Quick Start Projects 54% of the funds ($10.8M) Alignment/Articulation Project 20% of the funds ($4M) ASCCC Strengthening existing K-12 CTE 12.5% of the funds ($2.5M / 10 projects) Middle school/junior high career development 7.5% of the funds ($1.5M/10 projects) Critical professional development needs – Counseling & Faculty in-service (teams of CC & 9-12 faculty working together in industry) 6% of the funds ($700k = 14 projects @ 50k)
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ASCCC’s new project: Statewide Career Pathways: Creating School to College Articulation
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Opportunities for faculty to develop agreements. Database of agreements Outreach strategies to students, parents, staff Goal: More transportability for common subject areas Statewide Career Pathways
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Career pathways Agriculture, natural resources Arts, media, entertainment Building trades Energy Engineering Fashion, interior design Finance & business Health, human services Hospitality, tourism Info tech Manufacturing Educ services Public services Retail & wholesale Transportation
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Status Steering committee formed Existing agreements collected Technology under development Website under construction Fall 2006: first discipline meetings
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Articulation Resources Your articulation officer CIAC Tech prep coordinator Us! :-)
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