High-impact Educational Practices: What are they?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
First-Year Experience David Ross, Director. Background for FYE Programs ▫Nation-wide the majority of students drop out before completing 15 credits. ▫Research.
Advertisements

Center for Student Success. AATYC and Student Success Higher ed imperative used to be about access; now it’s about student success. Two-year colleges.
Entering Students Have a Lot to Tell Us: Are We Listening? NISOD Monday, May 31, :15AM – 12:15PM Room 13A.
Disaggregate to Appreciate Making SENSE of Texas’ Entering Community College Students 2012 TAIR Conference Corpus Christi, TX.
STRENGTHENING STUDENT SUCCESS — 2014 WHY IT MATTERS WHAT MATTERS MOST.
Creating a Sustainable and Collaborative Orientation District-Wide Student Services Task Force Presented by: Vice Presidents & Deans of Student Services.
A Matter of Degrees Promising Practices for Community College Student Success.
Identifying Promising Practices Promising Practices for Community College Student Success A FIRST LOOK.
Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD % …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they.
Ready or Not, Here I Come! Achieving the Dream Strategy Institute 2010.
Achieving the Dream Strategy Institute 2011 Am I Ready for College? Is the College Ready for Me?
Student Success – From the Starting Gate to the Finish Line Portland Community Colleges, November, 2011.
What do you do with all of this data? Presented By: Debbie Hardy Using the Community College Survey of Student Engagement (CCSSE) for Institutional Improvement:
Entering Community College Students: Consciously Creating Critical Connections 2012 FYE Conference San Antonio, TX.
Michigan Community College Student Services Association Your Role in Student Success: Doing More of What Works.
Engaging and Retaining New Developmental Education Students CASP Conference Thursday, Oct. 14, :00 – 10:00AM.
Developmental Education: Job One October 21, :00 p.m. (CST)
San Luis Obispo Community College District SENSE 2012 Findings for Cuesta College.
SENSE 2013 Findings for College of Southern Idaho.
© 2011 Center for Community College Student Engagement State Center Community College District CCSSE Workshop November 7, 2014.
2010 CCCSE Workshop Students Speak – We Listen June 1, 2010.
Mountain View College Spring 2008 CCSSE Results Community College Survey of Student Engagement 2008 Findings.
Catch Them While You Can! DCCCD 2 nd Annual Student Success Summer Institute 2010.
A Tour of CCSSE and SENSE Tools 2012 CCCSE Workshop.
Susan Burrow August 17, The Purpose of the QEP Improve student learning in developmental math through active learning and supplemental instruction.
Achieving the Dream Dr. Jan Lyddon October What is Achieving the Dream?
Student Success Report Alison Carter November 10, 2014.
High-Impact Educational Practices: What are they? Evelyn Waiwaiole Program Manager, High-Impact Practices Jeff Crumpley Associate Director CCCSE Center.
Community College Survey of Student Engagement JIM Meeting Presentation January 20, 2009 Jerome Ward Director, Institutional Research Cochise College.
Student Success – From the Starting Gate to the Finish Line Education Trust, November 2011.
Achieving the Dream: Assessing Implementation CCPRO February 20, 2007.
© 2011 Center for Community College Student Engagement Kentucky Community and Technical College System Statewide Workshop March 25, 2013.
2010 CCCSE Workshop Benchmarks and Benchmarking June 1, 2010.
1 This CCFSSE Drop-In Overview Presentation Template can be customized using your college’s CCFSSE/CCSSE results. Please review the “Notes” section accompanying.
PROMOTING STUDENT SUCCESS: WHAT WE’RE LEARNING ABOUT WHAT MATTERS MOST Kay McClenney Director, Center for Community College Student Engagement The University.
Making Connections Dimensions of Student Engagement 2010 Findings.
The SENSE Instrument Melissa Stahley-Cummings Director of Assessment Casper College.
League Innovations Conference 2011 Listen Up! Learning from Students about College Readiness.
Catch Them While You Can! Learning College Summit 2010.
NISOD 2011 Student Success – From the Starting Gate to the Finish Line.
Ready or Not, Here I Am! League Innovations Conference 2010.
Achieving the Dream Board of Trustees Institute 2010 Students Speak – We Listen!
It Takes a College! KARI KAHLER AND ASHLEY DARGA NORTHWESTERN MICHIGAN COLLEGE.
CCSSE 2015 Findings for Merced College Spring 2016 Flex Thursday, 14 January 2016 Presented by the Office of Student Services, Office of Student Equity.
CCSSE 2012 Findings for Southern Crescent Technical College.
Texas Developmental Education Advisory Committee Webinar Dr. Elizabeth Zachry Rutschow MDRC.
© 2011 Center for Community College Student Engagement Wyoming Community Colleges Statewide Workshop October 29, 2013.
Achieving the Dream Student Success and Completion
IRIS Education and Outreach
Student Testing Centers
Integrated Planning Roundtable May 22, 2017
Achieving the Dream Mark A. Smith.
Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board
D Adapted from: Kaplan & Norton The YCCD District Mission, Vision, Values & Goals are Foundational to College Planning. All College EMP work aligns.
Defining and Measuring Student Success Dr
Our mission is to provide programs that enhance learning and facilitate academic excellence for all UNT students.
Dreaming As Well As Doing:
Integrated Planning Roundtable August 28, 2017
Your Success is our Guarantee!
Multiple Measures Susan Barbitta Associate Director, Special Projects
AVID College Completion Project
Summer Bridge 2017 Summer Pilot Program College High School
Welcome Back! Spring 2014 Welcome back everyone – hope you had good holidays and are ready to tackle the spring semester. I have a very short presentation.
Imagine Success Engaging Entering Students Innovations 2009
Performance Update St. Philip’s College.
Item # Community College Survey of Student Engagement (CCSSE) Use & Satisfaction – Services.
Student Equity Planning August 28, rd Meeting
The Heart of Student Success
SENSE: Survey of New Student Engagement
ROSE STATE COLLEGE   “CLICK”  Community Learning in Critical Knowledge
Presentation transcript:

High-impact Educational Practices: What are they? Evelyn Waiwaiole Program Manager, High-Impact Practices Jeff Crumpley Associate Director CCCSE Center for Community College Student Engagement

Identifying and Promoting High-Impact Educational Practices in Community Colleges 3 Year Initiative Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Lumina Foundation Analyze data from four surveys Focus groups Institutes National Reports Initiative ends August, 2014

CCCSE: Collecting Data from Many Perspectives Four surveys that complement one another: CCSSE CCFSSE SENSE CCIS

CCCSE: Collecting Data from Many Perspectives

CCCSE: Collecting Data from Many Perspectives Qualitative and quantitative data Surveys provide quantitative data. Focus groups from the Initiative on Student Success and High-Impact Practice Initiative provide qualitative data.

CCCSE: Collecting Data from Many Perspectives Core surveys and special-focus items Core surveys are the same from year to year. Special-focus items examine a specific area and change from year to year. Special-focus items for the 2011 and 2012 surveys address promising practices for promoting student success and completion.

CCSSE High Impact Practices Early Results

Promising Practices for Community College Student Success Planning for Success: Assessment and Placement, Orientation, Academic Goal Setting and Planning, and Registration before Classes Begin Initiating Success: Accelerated or Fast-Track Developmental Education, First-Year Experience, Student Success Course, and Learning Community Sustaining Success: Class Attendance, Alert and Intervention, Experiential Learning beyond the Classroom, Tutoring, and Supplemental Instruction This first look focuses on 13 promising practices. These are educational practices for which there is emerging evidence of success: research from the field and from multiple colleges with multiple semesters of data showing improvement on an array of metrics, such as course completion, retention, and graduation. The practices are divided into three groups: planning for success, initiating success, and sustaining success.   Planning for Success: Assessment and Placement, Orientation, Academic Goal Setting and Planning, and Registration before Classes Begin Initiating Success: Accelerated or Fast-Track Developmental Education, First-Year Experience, Student Success Course, and Learning Community Sustaining Success: Class Attendance, Alert and Intervention, Experiential Learning beyond the Classroom, Tutoring, and Supplemental Instruction

CCFSSE High Impact Practices

CCFSSE Promising Practice Items combined with Student responses 11% of CCSSE respondents reported that they registered for class after the first class session has started. Yet, 62% of faculty responders say that at least one student registered late for a class The Community College Faculty Survey of Student Engagement (CCFSSE), which is aligned with CCSSE, elicits information from faculty about their teaching practices, the ways they spend time both in and out of class, and their perceptions regarding students’ educational experiences. All CCFSSE analyses use a three-year cohort of participating colleges. The 2010 CCFSSE Cohort includes all colleges that participated in CCFSSE in 2008, 2009, and 2010 (each college’s most recent year of participation).

SENSE High Impact Practices

SENSE Promising Practice Items Entering students and class attendance The Survey of Entering Student Engagement (SENSE) is a tool that helps colleges better understand the experience of entering students — and engage these students in the earliest weeks of their college experience. Community colleges typically lose about half of their students prior to the students' second college year. This alone is reason to look more closely at our colleges' front doors and students' earliest experiences with college. But the data provide even more reasons: An Achieving the Dream study determined that 14% of entering students do not earn a single college credit in their first term. In turn, this dramatic lack of success lowers persistence rates. Just 15% of students who earn no credits in their first term persist to the following term, compared to 74% of students who earn credit in their first term.

What students say about skipping class

CCIS High Impact Practices

CCIS, CCSSE, CCFSSE Promising Practices Colleges That Report Having It Students Who Report Doing It Full-Time Faculty Who Teach or Facilitate Orientation 96% 58% 13% Student Success Course 83% 24% 12% First-Year Experience 26% 17% Learning Community 56% 16% Accelerated Developmental Education 42% 14% CCIS collects information about whether and how college implement a variety of promising practices. It was developed as part of the Center’s initiative, Identifying the Promoting High-Impact Practices in Community Colleges.

Students are not always well-informed

Supplemental Instruction Students who use it 19% Faculty who make it available 44% Colleges that offer it 87% New Trend?? - 14% of CCIS colleges report mandatory SI for all developmental education students CCIS collects information about whether and how college implement a variety of promising practices. It was developed as part of the Center’s initiative, Identifying the Promoting High-Impact Practices in Community Colleges.

A Student Speaks about SI

CCIS High Impact Practices How does student participation in these promising practices show up in CCSSE benchmark scores?

2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by Registration – Promising Practice Item #1 In = 211672 Out = 26828 Registered for all courses before the first day of class Registered late Sources: 2011 CCSSE data

2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by Orientation – Promising Practice Item #2 IN = 137681 Out = 99640 Participated in Orientation Did not Participate in Orientation Sources: 2011 CCSSE data

Views of Orientation

2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by FYE – Promising Practice Item #3 In = 60963 Out = 170030 Participated in First Year Experience Did not participate in First Year Experience Sources: 2011 CCSSE data

2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by Learning Comm 2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by Learning Comm. – Promising Practice Item #4 In = 30293 Out = 199078 Participated in Learning Community Did not Participate in Learning Community Sources: 2011 CCSSE data

Impression of a first year learning community

2011 CCSSE Benchmark Scores by SSC – Promising Practice Item #5 In = 55393 Out = 174300 Participated in Student Success Course Did not Participate in Student Success Course Sources: 2011 CCSSE data

Student Success Courses

High Impact Practices: What comes next?

CCIS High Impact Practices: Next steps Analysis of components inside of each promising practice Analysis of the relationship between each promising practice and self-reported GPA Analysis of the relationship between each promising practice and student records Deeper looks at college specific programs with successful results CCIS collects information about whether and how college implement a variety of promising practices. It was developed as part of the Center’s initiative, Identifying the Promoting High-Impact Practices in Community Colleges.

Questions ? Visit Booth #209 in the Exhibit Hall Center for Community College Student Engagement 3316 Grandview Street Austin, Texas 78705 Phone: 512-471-6687 www.ccsse.org