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Building and Sustaining Critical Connections

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Title: Building and Sustaining Critical Connections


1
Building and Sustaining Critical Connections
National Center for Academic Transformation
Redesign Alliance 4th Annual Conference
2
STAND UP
  • If you earned a degree while attending college
    as a part-time student
  • If you earned a degree while working 20 or more
    hours per week
  • If you ever, for any reason, stopped/dropped
    out of college
  • If you were the first in your family to attend
    college

3
STAND UP
  • If English is your second language
  • If in the course of your daily college life,
    you found yourself in the minority
    (race/ethnicity/gender) in most situations
  • If you can name an individual who made a
    significant difference in your development and
    success in college.

4
IMAGINE SUCCESS!
5
  • Build Connections, Build Success
  • How can institutions foster
  • stronger and more diverse connections
  • withand amongstudents?

6
MAKING CONNECTIONS What Matters Most for
Student Success?
7
CCSSECommunity College Survey of
Student Engagement
  • Cumulatively, CCSSE has surveyed almost a million
    students from 754 different community colleges in
    49 states, British Columbia, Ontario, Nova
    Scotia, the Marianas, and the Marshall Islands.

8
SENSE Survey of Entering Student Engagement
  • Cumulatively, SENSE has surveyed well over
    100,000 students from 199 different community
    colleges in 35 states, the Northern Marianas,
    and the Marshall Islands.

9
Initiative on Student Success
  • Listening
  • systematically
  • to students

10
ACHIEVING THE DREAM Community Colleges Count
  • Evidence emerges from
  • Over 1100 coach visits to 102 colleges in 22
    states
  • Required student cohort tracking
  • Required evaluation of student success strategies

11
WHAT MATTERS MOST
  • Engagement matters!

12
Engagement Matters furthermore
  • In many colleges, with many students, engagement
    is unlikely to happen by accident.
  • It has to happen by design.
  • Or, by redesign.

13
WHAT MATTERS MOST
  • In focus groups with students, what do they
    typically report as the most important factor in
    keeping them in school, persisting toward their
    goals?
  • Relationships matter

14
PERSONAL CONNECTIONS
15
Student Focus Groups
  • If students ran the college.?

16
Personal Connections
17
Personal Connections
  • Entering Students First Impressions of Their
    Colleges

The very first time I came to this college, I
felt welcome.
18
  • Piglet sidled up to Pooh from behind.
  • Pooh! He whispered.
  • Yes, Piglet?
  • Nothing, said Piglet, taking Poohs paw. I
    just wanted to be sure of you.
  • A.A. Milne (1882-1956)

19
CULTIVATING CONNECTIONS
20
Cultivating Connections
  • Connections with students futures
  • Connections in the classroom
  • Connections on campus / outside the classroom
  • Connections beyond the campus
  • Connections in virtual space

21
Cultivating Connections
  • The twofold challenge
  • Use data to understand the status quowhich
    students need to be better engaged
  • Find ways to use each dimension, each venue for
    engagement to create meaningful, lasting
    connections

22
Least Engaged Students
  • Among the least engaged community college
    students
  • Part-time students
  • Traditional-age students (those 24 and younger)
  • Students not seeking credentials
  • Students who have not completed 30 or more
    credits
  • Male students
  • Students who work more than 30 hours per week
  • Students who have not participated in orientation
  • Students who have not participated in learning
    communities

This analysis does not include students who hold
degrees. Source 2009 CCSSE Cohort
data.
23
CONNECTING STUDENTS WITH THEIR FUTURES (AND WITH
REALITY) High Expectations and Aspirations
24
High Expectations and Aspirations
  • Percent of entering students who strongly or
    somewhat agree that they have the motivation to
    do what it takes to succeed in college
  • 90
  • Percent of entering students who strongly or
    somewhat agree that they are prepared
    academically to succeed in college
  • 84

25
High Expectations and Aspirations
Percentage of students who, at least once during
their first three weeks of college
26
CONNECTIONS IN THE CLASSROOM
27
  • What is a good class?

28
ENGAGED LEARNING
29
Active and Collaborative Learning
  • Worked with other students on projects during
    class
  • National
  • 46 often or very often (13 never)

30
CONNECTIONS OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM / ON CAMPUS
31
Connections on Campus Orientation
Have you attended an orientation program or
course?
Students who attended a college orientation
Source 2009 CCSSE Cohort data.
32
Connections on Campus
  • Students who say they never worked with other
    classmates outside of class to prepare class
    assignments
  • 41
  • Students who report that they never discussed
    ideas from their readings or classes with
    instructors outside of class
  • 47

33
An Integrated Support Network Entering students
who are unaware of support services during their
first three weeks of college
Source SENSE data.
34
  • Students
  • dont do
  • optional!!

35
Making the Most of Connectionson Campus
  • Make outside-the-classroom engagement
    inescapable.
  • Require students to participate in educational
    experiences that are important to their success.
  • Make student services mandatory and/or integrate
    them into coursework.

36
CONNECTIONS BEYOND THE CAMPUS
37
Connections Beyond the Campus
Will you have an internship, field experience,
co-op experience, or clinical assignment while
attending this college?
Source 2009 CCSSE Cohort data.
38
Making the Most of Connections Beyond the Campus
  • Require experiential learning as part of the
    course.
  • Encourage high-impact experiences such as
    service learning, study abroad

39
CONNECTIONS IN VIRTUAL SPACE
40
Connections in Virtual Space
  • FACT Students increasingly use social media and
    other virtual tools to interact.
  • FACT Students value personal connections at
    their colleges.

41
  • These are just technologies. Using them does
    not make you modern, smart, moral, wise, fair, or
    decent. It just makes you able to communicate,
    compete, and collaborate farther and faster.
  • Thomas L. Friedman
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist

42
Connections in Virtual Space
  • Use online and social networking tools to
  • cultivate relationships
  • that help students feel connected and
  • encourage them to persist in their studies.

43
Use of Social Networking ToolsFor any purpose
Traditional-Age Students
Nontraditional-Age Students
Source 2009 CCSSE data.
44
Use of Social Networking ToolsTo communicate
about coursework
Traditional-Age Students
Nontraditional-Age Students
Source 2009 CCSSE data.
45
Use of Social Networking Tools
  • Some use of social networking tools is related to
    increased engagement
  • But there is a point of diminishing returns.

46
  • With new technologies weve tended to do the
    same things more efficiently, when what we need
    is to do different things more effectively.
  • Christopher Dede, Professor
  • Harvard School of Education

47
DOING EDUCATION DIFFERENTLY, BASED ON
EVIDENCE Whats Required?
48
WHAT MATTERS MOST
  • Focused, sustained efforts to purposefully
    redesign educational experiences and bring them
    to scale, can produce real improvements in
    student engagement, learning, persistence, and
    academic attainment.

49
WHAT MATTERS MOST
  • Student Engagement By Design

50
Encouraging Student Success Strategies
  • Mandatory
  • Assessment and placement
  • Orientation
  • Success course for students in dev ed
  • Participation in learning lab, tutoring and/or
    supplemental instruction
  • Stop late registration/ create late-start classes
  • Early advising / development of academic plan
  • Early alert systems

Students dont do optional.
51
Encouraging Student Success Strategies
  • Linked courses/ learning communities
  • Learning communities required for FTIC
  • Learning communities linking student success
    course and dev ed
  • Counselors and advisors in learning communities
  • Supplemental instruction
  • Case management / success coaches
  • Summer bridge or boot camp programs short/
    intensive skill refreshers
  • Contextualized dev ed
  • Cooperative/collaborative learning at scale

52
Fundamentals
  • The center of our work is student learning,
    persistence, and success.
  • We cant get better at what were not willing to
    look at.
  • Every course, every program, every service, every
    academic policy, every college is perfectly
    designed to achieve the exact outcome it
    currently produces.

53
Fundamentals
  • 4. If nothing changes, nothing changes.
  • 5. Neither organizations nor individuals are good
    at accomplishing things they never actually
    decided to do.

54
  • Better is possible.
  • It does not take genius.
  • It takes diligence.
  • It takes moral clarity.
  • It takes ingenuity.
  • And above all, it takes a willingness to try.
  • Atul Gawande

55
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56
  • Kay McClenney
    Director
    Center for Community College
    Student Engagement (CCCSE)
  • kmcclenney_at_ccsse.org

57
  • Eventually everything connects people, ideas,
    objects. The quality of the connections is the
    key to quality per se.
  • Charles Eames American
    designer, 1907-1978
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