Title: Academic Programs
1 1
2Academic Programs
Dr. Debbie Blanke, Stephanie Beauchamp, Dr.
Erin Taylor
3Overview
- Policies and Forms
- 3.4 Academic Program Approval
- 3.7 Academic Program Review
- 3.14 Undergraduate Degree Requirements
- 3.18 Academic Calendars
- 3.6 Cooperative Alliances
- 3.12 Undergraduate Academic Courseload
- 3.5 Intensive English Programs
- Reach Higher Update
- 3.10 Undergraduate Transfer Articulation
- Helpful Links and Protocol
- Questions and Answers
43.4 Academic Program Approval
- Degree Program Levels (p. 49)
- Informational Reports Available to Institutions
- Program Processes Forms
4
5Degree Program Levels
3.4 Academic Program Approval
- Level I Broad Umbrella
- Level II Specific Degree Category
- Level III Specific Degree (by name)
- Level IV Option, Major, Emphasis Under Level III
(50 or more of the same core)
6Informational Reports
3.4 Academic Program Approval
- Degree Program Inventory
- Degree Program Review Schedule
- Option Inventory (Level IV)
- Program Productivity
- http//www.okhighered.org
- http//www.okhighered.org/oeis/ProductivityReport/
Main.aspx
73.4 Academic Program Approval
- Process for new program proposal (p. 55)
- Systemwide LOI 30 days prior to proposal
submission - 30 days to protest after copies sent
- Protest must come from President to Chancellor to
be official - More detailed information required
- Academic Plan, demand, duplication, productivity,
electronic delivery, funding - Form for proposal (p. 151 in procedures)
8Program Forms
3.4 Academic Program Approval
- Program Modifications (p. 50)
- Process
- Substantive vs. Non-Substantive
- Forms (p. 175 in procedures)
- Post Audit/Final Approval (p. 74)
- Process
9- June 1, 2011
- Dr. John Smith, Academic Officer
- Re Program Review
- As you know, State Regents policy provides for
provisional approval of new programs with final
approval dependent upon meeting institutionally
established and State Regents approved criteria.
One Oklahoma State Community College (OSCC)
program is scheduled for review for final
approval in fall 2010 as described below. - At the September 12, 2008 meeting, the State
Regents authorized OSCC to offer the Associate in
Science in Biology (089) with the stipulation
that continuation of the program beyond fall 2011
would depend upon meeting the following criteria
established by the institution and approved by
the State Regents
9
10- Associate in Science in Biology (089)
- enroll 30 students in fall 2010 and
- graduate 13 students in 2010-11.
- In preparation for the evaluation, we request
OSCC provide a review of the program to the State
Regents office by September 15, 2011, so the
State Regents may take action regarding final
endorsement of the program. For your convenience
in assisting to provide appropriate information,
a post audit form in both Word and PDF format may
be found at http//www.okhighered.org/admin-fac/ac
ademic-forms/. - Thank you for your time and consideration. If
you have questions or concerns, please contact
Stephanie Beauchamp at 405-225-9399 or
sbeauchamp_at_osrhe.edu. - Sincerely,
- Houston D. Davis, Vice Chancellor for Academic
Affairs
10
113.4 Academic Program Approval
- Post Audit/Final Approval Form
- (p. 186 in procedures)
11
123.7 Academic Program Review
- Policy revisions
- Purpose program improvement and accountability
- Definitions added internal review team
external review team, low producing program (p.
75) - Certificate review language added
- Program review criteria revised (p. 76)
- External review process for low producing
programs (p. 82) - Criteria for low producing programs exemptions
(p. 81) - Report content (p. 84)
133.7 Academic Program Review
- Definitions (p. 75)
- Internal Review Team
- Academic peers WITHIN the institution that DO NOT
teach in the program - External Review Team
- Academic peers OUTSIDE the institution but
proficient in the program content area - Onsite or paper review allowed
- Low Producing Program does NOT meet criteria
specified in policy
13
143.7 Academic Program Review
- Certificate review added (3.7.4 p. 76)
- Certificates embedded in a program are reviewed
along with the main program. - Certificates not embedded in another program are
reviewed independently. - Program Review Criteria revised
- Centrality to Mission (3.7.5.A p. 76)
- Vitality of Program (3.7.5.B p. 77)
- Low Productivity Review Process (3.7.6 p. 81)
- Program Review Reports (3.7.7 p. 84)
14
153.7 Academic Program Review
- Vitality of Program (3.7.5.B)
- Program Objectives and Goals (3.7.5.B.1 p. 77)
- Quality Indicators (consistent with HLC)
(3.7.5.B.2 p. 77) - Productivity Indicators (3.7.5.B.3 p. 78)
- 5-year average
- Degrees Conferred Majors Enrolled
- AA/AS 5 AA/AS 25
- AAS 5 AAS 17
- Bacc 5 Bacc 12
- Masters 3 Masters 6
- Doc 2 Doc 4
15
163.7 Academic Program Review
- Vitality of Program (3.7.5.B)
- Other Quantitative Measures (3.7.5.B.4 p. 78)
- Number of courses exclusively for the major
- Student credit hours in major courses
- Direct instructional cost
- Number of credit hours that support the general
education component and other majors - Roster of faculty, including FTE in specialized
courses for the major - Employment or advanced studies for graduates
- Success of transfer students from major
16
173.7 Academic Program Review
- Vitality of Program (3.7.5.B)
- Duplication (3.7.5.B.5 p. 79)
- Determine extent of duplication within the system
- Consider sharing programs, joint degrees, etc.
- Demand from students, employers
- Demand for alternative forms of delivering the
content - Effective Use of Resources (3.7.5.B.6 p. 80)
17
183.7 Academic Program Review
- Low Productivity Review Process (3.7.6.A p. 81)
- Annual report sent to institutions
- Programs not meeting 5-year average in graduates
or majors must conduct external review unless
granted an exception - Exceptions (p. 81)
- New program in post audit
- Liberal Arts and Sciences programs supporting the
general education component - Offline programs (suspended or scheduled for
deletion) - Restructured program expected to meet
productivity within specified time period - Special purpose programs designed for specific
need (wind energy, Native American, womens
studies, Tinker programs, etc.) - Data discrepancies that can be factually
corrected - No cost/justifiable cost programs
18
193.7 Academic Program Review
- External Review Process (3.7.6. B p. 82)
- Site visit or paper review
- Team selected by chief academic officer
- Materials to team at least 4 weeks prior to
review - Team charge
- Self Study
- Previous Reviews/Findings
- Review schedule and timeline for a final report
19
203.7 Academic Program Review
- External Review Process (3.7.6. B p. 83)
- Team Report
- Provided to chief academic officer
- Copies sent to faculty and administrators in the
program - Team recommendations
- Suspend -- delete
- Modify -- continuation
- Team must include measureable goals and timeline
for monitoring progress
20
213.7 Academic Program Review
- State Regents Action (3.7.6. B.5 p. 83)
- Team report sent to Chancellor by President, then
forwarded to the State Regents for action - After action, recommendations must be implemented
within one year and progress monitored by staff - Program Review Reports - Format (3.7.7.A p. 84)
- Intro and process
- Executive Summary
- Analysis and Assessment
- Program Review Recommendations
- Forms under development (COI Procedures
Committee)
21
223.7 Academic Program Review
- State Regents Review and Action (3.7.7.B p. 85)
- Monitoring the Review Process institutional
expectation and state expectation (3.7.7.C p.
85) - Low Productivity Report
- Form (p. 202 in procedures)
22
233.14 Undergraduate Degree Requirements
- Definitions
- AA or AS general education requirements (p. 132)
- AAS general education requirements (p. 133)
- Baccalaureate general education requirements (p.
133) - Baccalaureate requirements and standards (p. 136)
- General Education Framework (p. 139)
- Policy has tables with specific hours/requirements
23
243.18 Academic Calendars
- Definitions (p. 169)
- Standards
- Submission and Approval of Academic Calendars
- Competency-Based Learning
- Form (p. 203 in procedures)
24
253.6 Cooperative Alliances Between Higher
Education Institutions and Technology Centers
- Cooperative Alliances voluntary partnerships
between AAS degree-granting institutions and
technology centers to allow qualified high school
students and adults to earn college credit for
certain technical courses reviewed by the higher
education partner but taught by the technology
center. (p. 65)
263.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Cooperative Agreement Program (CAP) academic
degree program offered by institutions that
includes approved courses taught by a technology
center and leads to an AAS degree or a
college-level, technical certificate that is a
subset of courses within the approved AAS degree.
(p. 65)
273.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Technical Concurrent Student Admission
Requirements An 11th or 12th grade student
enrolled in an accredited high school or a
student who is at least 16 years of age and
receiving high-school-level instruction at home
or from an unaccredited high school may, if s/he
meets the requirements, be admitted to a college
or university in The Oklahoma State System of
Higher Education that offers technical AAS and
certificate programs and enroll in technical
courses only. (p. 71)
27
283.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Minimum standards for State System institutions
are - an ACT score of 19 OR
- a PLAN score of 15 OR
- high school GPA of 2.5 AND
- a letter of support from the high school
counselor AND - written permission from a parent or legal
guardian. - Exception to policy
- All other concurrent admission policy
requirements remain in effect for technical
students, including retention standards of a 2.0
college cumulative GPA and concurrent enrollment
student academic workload (19 hours). (p. 46 in
procedures)
28
293.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Curriculum (p. 68)
- All continuing and future CAPs included in the
Cooperative Alliance shall be subject to the
State Regents Academic Program Approval and
Academic Program Review policies and criteria. - Quality Assurance - Faculty (p. 68)
- The appropriate academic dean reviews all faculty
credentials, and recommends all faculty for
approval. Once approved, technology center
faculty in approved CAPs becomes listed as
adjunct instructors for the higher education
institution.
29
303.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Quality Assurance Program Quality (p. 69)
- A specific full-time or dean-designated faculty
liaison with at least a minimal level of content
expertise provides annual review and alignment
of courses offered for credit in the CAP. Faculty
liaisons are members of the program advisory
committee.
30
313.6 Cooperative Alliances
- 3.6.4.A.4 Technical Course Crosswalk (TCW) (p.
67) - Faculty working on applied vs. theoretical
courses and reviewing common course descriptions.
- This crosswalk is only for technical courses and
will not have the same courses as the Course
Equivalency Project. Courses should not be on
both matrices. - For courses leading to an AAS degree (and may
transfer to a BT).
31
323.6 Cooperative Alliances
- Cooperative Agreement Programs (CAP) Requests
- Process
- Forms (p. 197 in procedures)
32
333.12 Undergraduate Academic Course Load
- Undergraduate course load is limited to a number
of semester-credit hours which is 50 percent
greater than the total number of weeks in the
applicable academic term spring/fall 24
hours. Summer -12 hours. (p. 126) - Note While high school concurrent enrollment
academic course workload is found in 3.9.6.I.1
It is 19 semester credit hours for the spring and
fall and 9 hours for summer. - Note Workload standards apply to cooperative
alliance students. You may need to be helpful to
your technology center staff and explain the
calculation.
33
343.5 Intensive English Program Approvaland Review
- The purpose of the policy is to specify criteria
for approval and review of IEP programs available
to non-native speakers of English to ensure
adequate preparation for college level academic
work at an Oklahoma institution of higher
education. (p. 57)
34
353.9 International Student Admission
- 3.9.5 International Student Admission and
Admission of Non-native Speakers of English - Students must meet one of the standards described
below to demonstrate their competency in English.
Institutions may not waive this admission
requirement as part of the alternative admission
category within the State Regents general policy
on admission. - 1. Standardized Testing
- 2. Intensive English Program (IEP)
- 3. High School Performance
- 4. Completion of a baccalaureate or graduate
degree from a college or university where English
is the primary teaching language - 5. Institutional Discretion
35
363.5 Intensive English Program Approval and Review
- There are 11 approved IEPs in Oklahoma
- OSU, OU, UCO, NSU, OCU, SGU
- OCCC, TCC
- Oklahoma City (ECI), Edmond (ELC), Tulsa (ULI)
- Listing on p. 43 in procedures
36
37Helpful Information
- CIP Code Updates (2010 version)
- http//nces.ed.gov/ipeds/cipcode/Default.aspx?y55
- Program Forms
- http//www.okhighered.org/admin-fac/academic-forms
/ - Program Demand Resources
- http//www.oesc.ok.gov/
37
38Helpful Information
- Protocol
- Official Copy Sent From President to Chancellor
- E-mail CCs to Debbie OR Stephanie (these are not
official submissions, but we can start a
preliminary review from them while awaiting the
official submission)
38
39- Program Update for
- COI Policy Workshop
- July 14, 2011
40- Bachelor of Science in
- Organizational Leadership (775)
- Associate in Arts in Enterprise Development (675)
- Associate in Science in Enterprise Development
(676)
41REACH HIGHER Web Sitewww.reachhigheroklahoma.or
g
42REACH HIGHER The Curriculum
- Baccalaureate Program
- General Education 40 hrs.
- Professional Electives 33-39 hrs.
- Field Exp./Internship 3 hrs.
- Core Required 27-30 hrs.
- Institution-specific 12-15 hrs.
- TOTAL CREDIT HOURS 124 hrs.
43REACH HIGHERAdmission Requirements
- Bachelors Degree
- At least 21 years old
- Completed at least 72 hrs. of college credit
- Minimum 2.0 graduation/ retention GPA in past
college work - Completed general education requirements as
defined by the home institution or by AA or AS
degree - NOTE no substitution of core courses at this
time and core courses are resident credit from
any RH campus.
44REACH HIGHERCosts
- 174.00 per credit hour (resident)
- 413.00 per credit hour (non-resident)
- (Effective August, 2011)
45REACH HIGHER Web Sitewww.reachhigheroklahoma.or
g
46REACH HIGHER The Curriculum
- Associate Program
- General Education 37 hrs.
- Core Required 23 hrs.
- TOTAL CREDIT HOURS 60 hrs.
- Options
- Business (accounting, economics, management,
business statistics, etc.) - General Studies (individualized for the students
academic and career goals)
47REACH HIGHERAdmission Requirements
- Associate Degrees
- Completed at least 18 hrs. of college credit
- Minimum 2.0 graduation/ retention GPA in past
college work - Completed any required remedial work
48- Associate Degrees policy clarifications
- The Two-Year Reach Higher Campuses include
CASC, CSC, EOSC, MSC, NEO AM, NOC, OCCC, RCC,
RSC, SSC, TCC, WOSC, OSU-OKC (AS only), and
OSUIT (AS only). - Resident credit clarifications
- General Education requirements (37 credit hours)
can be satisfied by credit earned at an Oklahoma
institution participating in the Course
Equivalency Project (CEP). Courses taken from
the CEP listings will fulfill resident credit
requirements. - Core courses/major requirements (23 credit hours)
must include 15 of the final credit hours from
Oklahoma institutions participating in the Reach
Higher associate degree completion program. This
includes the 12 Oklahoma community colleges and 2
Oklahoma technical branches accredited by the
Higher Learning Commission listed above. - Course Substitutions
- General Education and Business Option courses are
specified to come from approved CEP course
groupings. No substitutions are allowed for
general education or the business option.
49REACH HIGHERCosts
- Same as current tuition costs at each
participating institution (no common tuition at
this point in time). - On average, 90 per credit hour for Oklahoma
residents
50REACH HIGHERCurrent Status
- 2,810 Inquiries (2-year 4-year)
- 1,747 Applications (4-year)
- 430 Majors enrolled (25 AA-AS/405 BS)
- 561 Total enrolled in classes (2-year
4-year) - 179 Program Graduates through spring 2011
for 2-year (13) and 4-year (166) - 152 Referred to other programs
51ORGL Majors Non-majors Totals
Spring 2007 36 14 50
Fall 2007 98 62 160
Spring 2008 166 95 261
Fall 2008 208 161 369
Spring 2009 225 131 356
Fall 2009 276 148 424
Spring 2010 270 180 450
Fall 2010 335 176 508
Spring 2011 405 131 536
Percentage Increase from 2007 1,125 935 1,072
52- Organizational Changes
- NSU no longer Lead Institution
- 4-Year Council, Dr. McElroy, NSU
- 2-Year Council, Dr. Paul Gasparro, SSC
- Ms. Sheila Smith, new Reach Higher Administrator
(started June 13, 2011)
53Questions Answers
53
54 54
55Policy Overview
- (3.6 continued)
- Technical Course Crosswalk
- Faculty asked to evaluate coursework as applied
or theoretical and to review common course
descriptions. - This crosswalk is only for technical courses and
will not have the same courses as the Course
Equivalency Project. Courses should not be on
both matrices. - Debuts Fall 2011.
- For courses leading to an AAS degree (and may
transfer to a BT).
56Policy Overview
- 3.10 Undergraduate Transfer and Articulation
- The policy is designed to facilitate transfer
within the State System. - Required GPAs for admission of transfer students
can vary across the system. Use the Academic
Policies Procedures Handbook to review details.
57Policy Overview
- 3.10 Undergraduate Transfer and Articulation
- Clarifies for transfer students the point at
which the clock starts ticking in terms of
undergraduate requirements the degree
requirements in effect at the time of the
students initial full-time enrollment in any
State System college or university shall govern
lower-division prerequisites, provided the
student has had continuous enrollment in the
State System.
58Course Equivalency Project
- Portal entry www.OKCourseTransfer.org
- Course Equivalency Project (CEP) was established
in 1995. - Faculty appointed by the presidents review
disciplines selected by the Council equivalencies
annually. The transfer matrices is updated after
editing and final verification. - Additions, deletions and modifications of
coursework take place at September Faculty
Meetings and through the web-based database
AVPs and their designees may submit changes. - Private institutions may only add their courses
if they attended that disciplines Faculty
Meeting.
59Course Equivalency Project
- 8,000 courses/ 40 disciplines for 2010-2011
- 10 Faculty Meetings September 22, 2010 _at_UCO
- Biological Sciences Math
- Computer Science Information Systems
- English Psychology
- Criminal Justice Philosophy
- Engineering Nutrition
- Each Meeting requires an AVP Facilitator and
selection of a Chair from the faculty. - Bring 20 copies of syllabus for courses to be
added or modified - Standard 75 common course content and expected
learner outcomes
60CEPProcess
60
61 61