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Improving Graduation Rates: Knowing Where to Start

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Title: Improving Graduation Rates: Knowing Where to Start


1
Improving Graduation RatesKnowing Where to Start
  • Gary R. Hanson, Ph.D.
  • Senior Research and Policy Analyst
  • Institutional Studies and Policy Analysis
  • The University of Texas System

2
Improving Graduation Rates
  • Overview
  • Understanding the issues
  • Some Universal Wisdom from the research
    literature
  • Student flow - Identifying pockets of
    opportunity
  • Identifying institutional speed bumps
  • Knowing what can change
  • Developing a strategy

3
Improving Graduation Rates
  • From the AASCU Graduation Rates Outcomes Study
  • simply finding best practice programs
    somewhere and plugging it in is unlikely to be
    effective.

Source American Association of State Colleges
and Universities (2005). Student Success in
State Colleges and Universities A Matter of
Culture and Leadership.
4
The Issues
  • Knowing which graduation rate(s) to improve
  • Understanding how/when students succeed or fail
  • Knowing how the institution contributes to
    student success and failure
  • Identifying the barriers to improvement
  • Developing strategies to improve graduation rates

5
Which Graduation Rate(s) Should We Improve ?
6
Which Graduation Rate?
  • What is your advertised graduation rate?
  • What are the 4- and 6-year graduation rates for
    these student groups?
  • First-time-in-college (FTIC)
  • Transfer students with 15 hours or 30 hours
  • First-generation students
  • First-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
  • Part-time students
  • Students with unmet financial need
  • Working students (more than 20 hours)

7
What Does It Take?
  • How many students lives would you need to
    change each year in order to improve your
    institutional graduation rate by
  • 1
  • 5
  • 10

8
Do the Math
  • How many first-time-at-your institution
    students did you have in the fall of 2004?N
    ___________
  • How many students do you have to keep enrolled
    for the next 6 years to improve your graduation
    rate by 1?N ____________

9
What Do We Know?Some Universal Wisdom from
the Research Literature
10
What Do We Know?
  • If we teach students using the same pedagogy,
    assess them using the same methods, and provide
    the same levels of academic and social support,
    we will achieve the same results ---- and
    graduation rates will NOT change.

11
What Do We Know?
  • Graduation is the result of a complex set of
    factors that vary by individual student and
    individual institution.

12
What Do We Know?
13
What Do We Know?
  • There are no easy answers or quick fixes.

14
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15
Graduation Rate Expectations
  • Improving graduation rates is a long and
    difficult task.
  • Expect improvements of 1 to 3 any given year.
    (The national average for the annual percentage
    improvement in graduation rates in 2003 was
    3.2.)
  • Improving graduation rates must remain a high
    priority for a very long time.

16
What Do We Know
  • Institutions can influence some, but not all,
    of the factors that contribute to graduation.

17
What Do We Know?
  • Every student who leaves your institution before
    graduation has MULTIPLE reasons for doing so.

18
What Do We Know?
  • The intensity and rigor of a students high
    school curriculum, especially mathematics and
    science, is a good predictor of first-year
    performance and graduation.

Source Adelman (1999). Answers in the Tool
Box Academic Intensity, Attendance Patterns,
and Bachelors degree Attainment.
19
What Do We Know?
  • Academic performance in the first semester or
    year, especially the number of D, F and W
    semester credit hours, is one of the best
    predictors of graduation.

Des Jardins, S., Hanson, G. R., Kroc, R.
(1999). Gatekeeping Courses as Barriers to
Graduation. A paper presented at the 1999
AIR National Forum, Seattle, WA.
20
What Do We Know?
  • Student financial support (family, institution,
    state and federal) influences retention and
    graduation ONLY when it covers more than 90 of
    the student budget. Below that level, financial
    support has little impact on graduation.

21
What Do We Know?
  • Good academic advising contributes to graduation
    by preempting or counterbalancing the
    negative consequences of various individual
    choices and institutional barriers.

22
What Do We Know?
  • Developmental education contributes to graduation
    but only when completed early in the students
    educational career.
  • A recent THECB study showed that only 4 of 10
    students (41) in Texas public universities who
    needed math remediation completed it during the
    first year.

Source Texas Higher Education Coordinating
Board (2005). Developmental Math.
23
What Do We Know?
  • At least some proportion of students fail to
    graduate because of a poor match between student
    learning and faculty teaching. That is, some
    students simply end up in the wrong class with
    the wrong teacher for how they need to learn.

24
Knowing What to Look For
25
Factors Contributing to Graduation
Policy Factors
People Factors
Graduation
Teaching/Curriculum Factors
Resource Factors
26
People Reasons - Students
  • How well prepared are your students?
  • Can students afford to attend?
  • How street-smart are your students?

27
People Reasons - Faculty
  • How well do your faculty teach?
  • Can we improve graduation rates without lowering
    academic standards?
  • What role does Academic Darwinism play on your
    campus?
  • Why should faculty change HOW they teach?

28
People Reasons - Leadership
  • Does the leadership of the institution declare
    graduation as an important goal?
  • Does the graduation message permeate the
    institution at all levels?
  • Does the leadership systematically review
    policies that impact graduation?

29
Policy Reasons
  • What policies hinder timely graduation?
  • Admissions
  • Financial aid
  • Student promotion and probation
  • Faculty grading
  • Class availability

30
Curriculum / Teaching Reasons
  • What are the risks/rewards of changing HOW we
    teach?
  • Is our curriculum too diverse? Does it give
    students too many choices?
  • How can we better motivate students to attend
    class?
  • How do we reward faculty for promoting retention?

31
Improving Graduation Rates
  • From the AASCU Graduation Rates Outcomes Study
  • building a culture of success requires
    attention to data.

32
Improving Graduation Rates
  • Building indicators that describe success can
    expose hidden ambiguities and clarify action
    requirements
  • Indicators can be used to publicly monitor
    progress and be referenced by leaders to both
    deal with problems and celebrate success

33
Understanding Student Success and Failure
34
Where are the speed bumps?
  • What are the pathways through your
    institution?
  • Which pathways lead to graduation?
  • Which pathways delay graduation or lead out of
    the institution?

35
Pathways to GraduationIndicators to Monitor
  • Percent of original cohort enrolled each semester
    (traditional retention measure)
  • Percent of cohort who attend each long semester
    full-time
  • Student flow through the institution by semester
  • Cumulative semester credit hours by pattern of
    semesters enrolled
  • Distribution of total number of semesters
    enrolled from initial entry to checkpoint
    semester after 4 or 6 years

36
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37
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38
Monitoring Pathways Through CollegeExample
39
125 of 1,828 6.8
Number Graduated in 4 Years 11 of 125 or 8.8
40
126 of 1,685 or 7.5
Number Graduated in 4 Years 15 of 125 or 11.9
41
Grad rate 16/35 45.7
Grad rate 8/9 88.9
Grad rate 6/47 12.8
42
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43
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44
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45
Speed Bumps on the Road to Graduation
  • Academic failure
  • The teaching-learning-grading process
  • Lack of financial support
  • Lack of knowledge about the college process

46
Who Leaves and Why?
  • What percent of your students who leave have less
    than a 2.0 gpa?
  • What percent of the students who leave have at
    least one D, F or W on their transcript?
  • What percent of your students who leave have a
    cumulative financial debt greater than 10,000 in
    the first two years?
  • What percent of your students left in good
    academic standing, but couldnt stand your
    institutional culture?
  • What percent of your students stop out to work
    after any given semester?

47
The Relationship of Academic Failure to Retention
and Graduation
  • Large percentages of students who leave our
    institutions in the first two years have
    performed poorly.
  • Stayers and Leavers were carefully matched on 7
    factors high school class rank, SAT scores,
    major, ethnicity, gender, living on- or
    off-campus and orientation attendance.

Source Ruddock, M., Hanson, G. R., Moss, M.
(1999). New Directions in Student Retention
Research Looking Beyond Interactional Theories
of Student Departure. A paper presented at the
1999 AIR Forum. Seattle, WA.
48
Source DesJardins, S. L. Pontiff, H. (1999).
Tracking Institutional Leavers An Application.
AIR Professional File. Association for
Institutional Research, Tallahassee, FL.
49
Failing Just One Course
  • Receiving a D or F in just one or two
    courses during the first two years of college
    dramatically reduces the chances for graduation.

DesJardins, S. L., Hanson, G.R. Kroc, R. J.
(1999). Gatekeeping Courses as Barriers to
Graduation. A paper presented at the 1999 AIR
Forum. Seattle, WA.
50
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51
Teaching-Learning-Grading
  • The Teaching-Learning-Grading process is not
    consistent at many institutions and contributes
    to academic failure and lower graduation rates.

52
Teaching-Learning-Grading
Hanson, G.R. (1999). Getting to the Heart of the
Matter. A paper presented at the 1999 AIR Forum,
Seattle, WA.
53
Hanson, G.R., Norman, P., Caillouet, C. (1999).
Conquering Calculus. Intra-Departmental
Variability in the Efficiency and Effectiveness
of Moving Students Through the Math Curriculum.
A paper presented at the 1999 AIR Forum,
Seattle, WA.
54
Hanson, G.R., Norman, P., Caillouet, C. (1999).
Conquering Calculus. Intra-Departmental
Variability in the Efficiency and Effectiveness
of Moving Students Through the Math Curriculum.
A paper presented at the 1999 AIR Forum,
Seattle, WA.
55
Money and Graduation
56
Money and GraduationFederal Student Loan
Amounts Borrowed by Degree Recipients in 4-year
Public Universities in Constant 2003-04 Dollars
Source ACE Issue Brief, Federal Student Loan
Debt 1993-2004, June 2005.
57
Money and Graduation
  • Increasing tuition by 1,000 reduces the
    probability of persisting in college by 16 for
    poor students, by 19 for working class students,
    by 9 for middle class students and by 3 for the
    wealthiest students.

Paulsen, M. St. John, E. P. (2002). Social
Class and College Costs Examining the Financial
Nexus Between College Choice and Persistence.
Journal of Higher Education 73(2).
58
Money and Graduation
  • A 1,000 grant reduces a first-year, low-income
    students probability of dropping out by 23.

Source United States General Accounting Office
(1997). Challenges in Promoting Access and
Excellence in Education. Washington, DC U. S.
Government Printing Office.
59
Institutional CultureAll Those Other Factors
60
Other Reasons Students Leave
Source Ruddock, M., Hanson, G. R., Moss, M.
(1999). New Directions in Student Retention
Research Looking Beyond Interactional Theories
of Student Departure. A paper presented at the
1999 AIR Forum. Seattle, WA.
61
Other Reasons Students Leave
Source Ruddock, M., Hanson, G. R., Moss, M.
(1999). New Directions in Student Retention
Research Looking Beyond Interactional Theories
of Student Departure. A paper presented at the
1999 AIR Forum. Seattle, WA.
62
Strategies for Improvement
63
Graduation Rates Outcomes Study
  • Student success is more a product of an
    overarching shared culture than it is of the
    results of a more narrowly-conceived deliberate
    retention or graduation effort.

Source American Association of State Colleges
and Universities (2005). Student Success in
State Colleges and Universities A Matter of
Culture and Leadership.
64
Key Elements of a Success Culture
  • A pervasive attitude that all students can
    succeed with high academic standards
  • A sense of inclusiveness commonly characterized
    as belonging to a family
  • A strongly held sense of institutional mission
    that recognizes the campus as distinctive or
    special

65
Key Elements of Leadership
  • Leadership is a shared responsibility and is
    embedded within all levels of the campus. There
    are no silos.
  • Leadership qualities are more about listening
    than talking and more about consistent personal
    modeling than spectacular public performances.

66
Enabling Leadership
  • Perhaps the presidents greatest achievement
    is to have created an atmosphere of constant
    assessment and improvement without creating a
    climate of negative judgment and criticism.

67
Program Characteristics
  • Intentional
  • Carefully select faculty and staff
  • Develop intrusive programs of intervention
  • Require or mandate participation

68
Program Characteristics
  • Integrated
  • Provide both physical and organizational
    structures to connect students with programs and
    services

69
Program Characteristics
  • Collaborative
  • Academic and student affairs collaborate to
    design and deliver learning communities

70
Program Characteristics
  • Academic
  • Faculty role is not confined to instruction and
    formal programming
  • Curriculum is deliberately engineered to promote
    student success

71
What Can Campus Leadership Do?
  • Articulate a collective vision
  • Involve the campus community at all levels
  • Take stock- Audit your actions
  • Act strategically
  • Build an information infrastructure to monitor
    progress and provide detailed feedback about what
    works for which student populations
  • Invest in the culture
  • Monitor new hires
  • Socialize new faculty and staff
  • Establish a longitudinal student tracking system
  • Create rituals that recognize and reward success
  • Walk the Talk

72
What Can We Change?
  • Who we admit
  • How we support students
  • How and what we teach
  • Institutional culture
  • Admissions policy
  • Financial/academic/social support
  • Pedagogy/curriculum/assessment
  • Learner-centered, Teaching-centered

73
What Does It Take?
  • Strong leadership with a clear message that
    graduation rates can and will improve
  • FOCUS Deciding what can be changed
  • Knowing that it takes the entire academic
    village to change a graduation rate
  • Understanding why students fail to graduate in a
    timely manner

74
Students Will Graduate When . . .
  • They are prepared well
  • Financed well
  • Advised well
  • Taught well
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