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Turning the Revolving Door into the Staircase of Academic Success for Basic Skills Students NACADA October 5, 2011 Presented by: Marti Demarest Assistant Director, Student Success Center (former) Director, Gateway to College, Front Range CC Paula Yanish Director, Student Success Center
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Program Overview: About Aims Community College District National (USA), Colorado & Institutional Retention Data Institutional Strategies Emerging Scholars Accomplishments
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Campuses: Greeley, CO Fort Lupton, CO Loveland, CO Windsor, CO Online Founded: 1967 Over 130 degree & certificate programs About Aims
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Weld County 3,992 Square Miles Elevation: 4,658 ft. Climate: Snowfall: 33.7” Days Sunshine: 340
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Aims College Enrollment
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Retention – National Data First to Second Year Retention Rates (ACT Institutional Data File 2010) Institution TypeNMean % Two-year public82455.7% Two-year private10258.6% BA/BS public7867.6% BA/BS private39068.7%
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Lack of “College-Readiness” (National Center for Educational Statistics, US Department of Education, 2007) Percentage of U.S. College Students Needing Remediation in 2007
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2009 Colorado High School Graduates Requiring Remediation at Two-Year Public Schools Colorado Commission on Higher Education 2011 Legislative Report—02/11
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Aims Data
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Comparison of Remedial Needs of New Students at Aims
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Institutional Strategies for Improving Student Retention Fall 2006 – STAR pilot (STudent Achievement and Retention) – Title III grant funded (US Department of Education) High-risk students (1 st generation, low income, undecided/undeclared, academic probation) 74% of cohort required remediation Services include intensive academic advising, extended orientation, early alert 60% retention of first term cohort
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Theoretical Framework Nevitt Sanford –Challenge & Support Vincent Tinto –Academic/Social Integration –Goal/Institutional Commitment Nancy Schlossberg –Mattering vs. Marginality
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Staff Working with Emerging Scholars Program Assistant Director Retention Advisor—full-time 3 part-time Retention Advisors Advisors at outlying campuses College Prep Faculty First-Year Experience Course Coordinator Financial Aid Director
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Emerging Scholars Admission Criteria New to Aims Community College Unless concurrently enrolled in high school Degree or Certificate Seeking Have 2 or more academic deficiencies (English, Math, Reading)—optional Have 3 or more needs—highly recommended Cohort Goal – 300 students
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Emerging Scholars Program Requirements Fill out an ES application during first registration period Meet 3 times each semester with the assigned advisor Allow the institution to place a registration hold on his/her account requiring an approval for any changes Enroll in and complete college prep courses with a “C” or better and limit enrollment on other academic courses Enroll in and complete a college success (FYE) course—1 st semester Attend a minimum of 2 student success workshops during each semester after 1 st term Financial incentive
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College Success Class (AAA 101) Topics include: Welcome, class overview, college jargon Time management Reading your textbook Note-taking from a textbook Campus resources on the web Note-taking from a lecture Stress free math Students rights and responsibilities Memory and concentration Wellness and health issues Mastering self-management (setting priorities and goals) Paying for college Test taking strategies and final exam preparation Career exploration College pathways – transferring and career
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Emerging Scholars - Fall 2007 Demographic Breakdown 95 participants in Fall 2007 Age 60% are 18-19 years of age Ethnicity 49% White 42% Hispanic 3% Native American 2% Black 3% Unknown Gender 63% Female 34% Male Status 62% Full-time students Academic Needs 26% with 2 academic needs 74% with 3 academic needs
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Emerging Scholars Outcomes
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Emerging Scholars Fall ‘07 Emerging Scholars Cohort vs. Control Group Fall to Fall Retention Comparison
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Emerging Scholars – Spring 2008 Demographic Breakdown 117 participants in Spring 2008 Age 43% are <18-19 years of age 17% are 30+ years of ages Ethnicity 47% White 42% Hispanic 2% Native American 2% Black 1% Asian 6% Unknown Gender 57% Female 41% Male Status 53% Full-time students Academic Needs 32.5% with 2 academic needs 67.5% with 3 academic needs
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Emerging Scholars Outcomes
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Emerging Scholars Spring ‘08 Emerging Scholars Cohort vs. Control Group Spring to Spring Retention Comparison
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Emerging Scholars Retention, GPA, Success Emerging Scholars Total by Semester Retained to Spring semester % Retained to Spring Semester GPA First Semester Retained Fall to Fall % Retained Fall to Fall Fall 07957276%2.355558% Fall 0827419571%2.2314051% Fall 0936127676%2.4016345% Fall 1022516071%2.26 11049% Emerging Scholars Total by Semester Retained to Fall semester % Retained to Fall Semester GPA First Semester Retained Spring to Spring % Retained Spring to Spring Spring 081268366%2.534334% Spring 0927816258%2.3813950% Spring 1040720049%2.3116140% Spring 1125715158.9% Quantitative Results
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Some Key Accomplishments Served over 1,185 students since Fall 2007 Moved to a new location within Learning Commons (STAR Center) Established a Peer Mentoring Program Received TG Grant Program ($115,750) Instrumental in developing and implementing the institutional “Mandatory Course Placement Chart” and procedure Modified financial incentive model from grant to scholarship with support of Financial Aid Director
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Contact Information Dr. Patricia A. Matijevic Paula Yanish Dean for Student Services Director, Student Success Center 970-339-6374 patricia.matijevic@aims.edu 970-339-6537 paula.yanish@aims.edupatricia.matijevic@aims.edupaula.yanish@aims.edu Marti Demarest Shannon McCasland Director, Gateway to College Assistant Director, Student Life Marti.Demarest@frontrange.edu 970-339-6563 shannon.mccasland@aims.eduMarti.Demarest@frontrange.edushannon.mccasland@aims.edu 303-404-5167
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