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Stephanie Natale-Boianelli Assistant Professor of Developmental English Accelerated Learning Program Coordinator Richard Russell Assistant Professor of.

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Presentation on theme: "Stephanie Natale-Boianelli Assistant Professor of Developmental English Accelerated Learning Program Coordinator Richard Russell Assistant Professor of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stephanie Natale-Boianelli Assistant Professor of Developmental English Accelerated Learning Program Coordinator Richard Russell Assistant Professor of English English Department Coordinator Maryann Flemming-McCall Assistant Professor of Developmental English

2 ENG 101ENG 052 Community College of Baltimore ALP Model ALP

3 ALP Advantages (Baltimore model) reduces stigma improves attachment provides stronger role model encourages learning communities changes attitude toward developmental course allows individual attention allows time for non-cognitive issues allows coordination of the two courses ALP The Accelerated Learning Program

4 The Triad Model ENGL099 & ENGL101 are both three credit courses. Once a week, ENGL099 meets in a computer lab.

5 ALP Backward design The goal is for students to pass the college-level course. Developmental course is taken concurrently with the college-level course. Teacher is expected to both teach and mentor the students. Focus on non-cognitive issues 080 Traditional course The goal is for students to pass the developmental course. Developmental course is taken as a prerequisite to college-level course. Teaching is the only expectation. No formal focus on non-cognitive issues Two critical ALP features: Both courses are taught by the same professor. Eleven of the students in the college- level course placed into credit-level English.

6 ALP Syllabus Student Learning Outcomes/Objectives, similar to ENGL101 syllabus, with important additions: Students will learn the value of being an active participant in a learning community: how to prepare for/attend classes; actively participate; respectfully/responsibly interact with learners; ethically collaborate/study for other classes. Students will choose a program path for the next two years, study the schedule in the tabloid, make effective decisions for scheduling an academic semester. Students will discuss the pros and cons of shortened summer semesters and of online classes. Students will become familiar with the college culture: make use of available and appropriate resources; meet with the instructor to discuss individual program; learn about essential services/procedures for registration and about extracurricular activities; etc.

7 Curriculum Planning First day of each week: discuss questions from previous week in 101 and/or reading/writing concerns from other classes. Instructor consideration: What should be reinforced in both 101 class and in ALP? What should be addressed in only ALP? Design “just in time” exercises/group activities within learning communities. Sometimes student-generated concerns supersede planned activities. Active learning; NOT drill and practice. Personalize/contextualize learning for ALP students.

8 A Sample Week English 101 Day 1 Discuss new words to the OED online. Introductions. Review syllabus. Private writing. HW: Read/annotate “The Coddling of the American Mind” (The Atlantic September 2015) for next class. Day 2: Diagnostic reading/writing: Summarize and respond to the article. HW: Assign short response papers to The Northside (Nelson Johnson). Read/annotate “The Prologue” for next class. ALP Day 1 (Re-)introductions: What is ALP? Discuss active reading strategies. Preview material; then read/annotate in pairs “Brainology” (Carol Dweck). Compare annotations for the first part. What is the most significant and most confusing/disturbing line in the second part? (These could be the same.) Etc. Day 2 (computer lab) Complete entrance survey and learning inventory. On the discussion board, choose one word to describe Atlantic City. Respond.

9 Spring 2012Fall 2012 Spring 2013- Spring 2014 Fall 2014Spring 2014Fall 2014 Scaling Up: Timeline Effie Russell pilots program with 11 students 4 triads; 3 campuses; 4-6 triads; 3 campuses 7 triads; first evening triad 14 triads 10 triads; 4 adjuncts; part-time students eligible

10 Engl080 Track ALP Track Engl101 Track Gateway Course Success No. of Students 11733291427 English 101 Completion Rate 44%84%75% English 102 Completion Rate 3%54%49% Number of Semesters 322 ALP students are also retained at higher rates than Engl080 and Engl101 students and complete and pass more credits than Engl080 students.

11 From “Replicating the Accelerated Learning Program: Preliminary But Promising Findings” study conducted by the Center for Applied Research. You can access a copy of the study here: http://alp-deved.org/2014/02/findings-from-a-nationwide-alp- study-just-released/http://alp-deved.org/2014/02/findings-from-a-nationwide-alp- study-just-released/

12 From “Replicating the Accelerated Learning Program: Preliminary But Promising Findings” study conducted by the Center for Applied Research. You can access a copy of the study here: http://alp-deved.org/2014/02/findings-from-a-nationwide-alp- study-just-released/http://alp-deved.org/2014/02/findings-from-a-nationwide-alp- study-just-released/

13 From “Replicating the Accelerated Learning Program: Updated Findings” study conducted by the Center for Applied Research.

14 Triad Model Advantages Students Merging from two sections of Engl101 allows students to compare academic experiences. Larger class size fosters class discussion, creates a typical classroom environment, and allows for more diversity among the students. Faculty Merging from two sections of Engl101 allows for authentic discussions of the diversity of the student experience. Scheduling is easy: two days, three classes in a row; a full load for adjuncts; 9 credits total is 3/5 of a full-time load. Administration Class size is comparable to the developmental course.

15 Triad Model Challenges Students Gaps can make the course schedule inconvenient. Faculty Reaching every student individually in a single class session is difficult. Two Engl101 experiences must be united. Coordinators Triads are complicated and difficult to schedule. Finding and training faculty can be difficult, especially part-time faculty.

16 Career Infusion Academic Support Services Student Affairs Curriculum & Faculty

17 Why Career Development? Helps students identify and take ownership of goals Connects goals to their education Enables informed decision making for course selection/educational pathways Supports Atlantic Cape’s ALP Learning Outcomes Computer and Information literacy Familiarity with college resources Retention goals Strengthens connection to college and to instructor

18 On-going Activities Goals and values clarification through writing and discussion. Sample readings: “Four Steps to Choosing a College Major” http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/02/education/edlife/four- steps-to-choosing-a-career-path.html http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/02/education/edlife/four- steps-to-choosing-a-career-path.html “How to Live Wisely” http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/02/education/edlife/how- to-live-wisely.html http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/02/education/edlife/how- to-live-wisely.html

19 Career Infusion Collaborate with Student Affairs personnel who conduct Values Clarification activity. Writing Assignment: reflection piece on the experience Added benefits: Connected students with Student Affairs personnel Students were given preparatory information for registration

20 Career Exploration Activities Took Holland Career Codes Quiz http://www.roguecc.edu/counseling/hollandcodes http://www.roguecc.edu/counseling/hollandcodes Researched careers using Occupational Outlook Handbook www.bls.gov/oco/ Writing Assignment: connection of goals/values with career choices

21 Discovering Campus with Scavenger Hunts

22 Discovering Campus: Student Handbook Project Step 1. Review/discuss the official student handbook. Step 2. Brainstorm topics that should be in our handbook. Step 3. Research/explore topic in pairs. Step 4. Create the handbook page. Step 5. Presentation/peer review. Step 6. Revision and publication.

23 ICW (Week 1): Besides getting “good grades,” what are your goals for this semester? How will you ensure that you are working towards these goals? Students will revisit these goals and their progress throughout the course. Students write a short reflection/letter to me to submit with Paper #1. ICW (Week 3): Discuss your writing process. What was the most difficult part about writing Paper #1? What are the strengths of your paper? Self-Assessment: Reflective Writing

24 Self-Assessment: End-of-Term Reflection I. What are characteristics of “good writing”? Use specific examples read for class and explain what made them effective. II. What are your strengths as a writer? Use specific examples. III. What are you still working on in your writing? Some variation used for the “final exam”

25 Self-Assessment: End-of-Term Reflection From “Ending at the Start” (David Gooblar), The Chronicle of Higher Education, 29 April 2015: Write a letter to a future student of this class. What do you wish you would have known before taking this class? What should future students know about this class or professor? (Advice.)

26 Thank you! “I always felt like I was one step ahead of all the other kids in English 101 because of the extra work with the same professor.” “I felt like the transition of coming into college was very smooth because I learned a lot here academically, but I also learned all my resources at the campus.” “I felt more like a student at ACCC because I learned so much about not only English as a course but this college as a whole.” “ALP greatly helped my confidence in 101. At the beginning, I didn’t know or thought I didn’t know anything about reading and writing…ALP is awesome for becoming part of the Atlantic Cape family and meeting students at similar levels…Best class ever.” www.atlantic.edu/alp


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