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Far North Data Disaggregation Workshop September 2017. Disaggregating Students by Program of Study: The Guided Pathways Connection. Far North Data Disaggregation Workshop September 2017. Navigating the Array of Program Options.
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Disaggregating Students by Program of Study: The Guided Pathways Connection Far North Data Disaggregation Workshop September 2017
Navigating the Array ofProgram Options • Students often have limited information concerning programs and course sequences (Jenkins, 2014) • They rely on less than ideal solutions (Scott-Clayton, 2011) • Students believe that a well-defined pathway would help them achieve their goal (Booth et al., 2013)
When do we ask students to pick a major or program of study? • When students enter CCCApply, the second thing they are asked to do is to indicate their "Intended major or program of study” • How many programs do you think are in a typical drop-down list that students must choose from? • Let’s take a look…
How many choices? Answer: Lots and LOTS! • In this example there were 9 screens of majors and 251 major choices • Are students able to successfully navigate this interface? • What does that say regarding the quality our program of study or major data?
Pathways to the rescue! • Agriculture, Nutrition and Culinary Arts • Business • Arts & Humanities • Education • Health Sciences • Industrial and Transportation Tech • Public Safety • Behavioral and Social Sciences • Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math • Personal and Career Exploration
Discussion questions • What is a program? • How does a program differ from a major? • Are students asked to select a program of study (i.e., a specific degree or certificate) on CCCApply? How many degrees or programs are listed on CCCApply? • How do you ensure that students enter a program of study as quickly as possible?
Future Directions • Challenge 1: Implementing Meta-Majors • Students should encounter meta-majors early in their interaction with the college (i.e., application) • Solution: Modify the statewide CCCApply application • CCCApply project to include option for meta-majors in the program interface in March 2018 update
Disaggregating the Student Body by Program of Study Case StuDy #1: Bakersfield College
Bakersfield College • Served 22,426 students in Fall 2016 • Offers 10 pathways (aka, meta-majors) • Pathways were developed and agreed upon in an iterative way through a series of meetings/retreats • The magic of the Program Control Number (PCN)
Bakersfield College: Using Program of Study to Guide Students • Completion Coaching Communities • Data Coach • Program Faculty • Counselor • Financial Aid Specialist • Administrative Lead (dean) • Focused on a related cluster of programs which have shared fundamental coursework
Completion Coaching Community • Focused on leading indicator momentum points: • Attempting program-appropriate math in their first term • Attempting English in their first term • Attempting 15 units in their first term • Contact students to ensure they are aware of program requirement and on the correct path • Just getting started in Fall 2017
Bakersfield College: Evidence of Effectiveness Percentage of Incoming Students Attempting 15 or More Units in the First Term
Future Directions • Challenge 2: Codifying Program of Study • Solution: Use CCCCO-assigned Program Control Number • Identifies program of study in student education plans • Same code that we currently use to report program awards • Connects student’s path to their degree or certificate • Connects program to statewide labor market data • Systematizes program choices in CCC Apply and relates program pathways to a meta-major
Disaggregating the Student Body by Program of Study Case Study #2: Georgia State University
Georgia State University • Served approx. 25,000 in 2015-2016 year • 33% are first-generation college students and 53% of students receive a Pell Grant • Meta-majors provide maximum interchangeability among the programs that comprise the meta-major • Students can change their program of study within a meta-major in second term without unit loss
Georgia State University • Offered new student support services at scale • Instrumental in helping students enter and remain on a pathway • Significant investment in advising to help students remain on track for success • Reduced the student to advisor ratio from 1500:1 to 300:1 • Graduation and Progression System (GPS)
The GPS at GSU • Major Matcher probabilities of success in every undergraduate major • GPS displays a student’s progression in meeting the requirements of all programs of study, and indicates the likelihood of success in all the courses that a student has not yet enrolled in.
Georgia State University: Evidence of Effectiveness Graduation Rates at Georgia State University by Ethnic Group and Race (2004-2005 vs. 2014-2015 )
Discussion questions • Are you able to identify which program a student is pursuing? • How do you monitor students’ progress toward completing their program? • Do students know how far along they are in their programs and what they have left to do to complete them?
Future Directions • Challenge 3: Keeping students on the path • Opportunity: Analytics tool similar to GSU’s GPS system (Starfish, anyone?) • Such tools can monitor students’ progress on a pathway and allow colleges to intervene when necessary • Colleges have to dedicate the resources necessary to mapping/coding the various permutations of courses that can satisfy the requirements for an award
Disaggregating the Student Body by Program of Study Case StuDy #3:Guttman Community College
Guttman College • Serves approximately 1,000 students per semester • In Fall 2016, 60% of students were Hispanic and 27% were African American • Was specifically designed as pathways institution • Five programs of study -- all developed after an examination of local labor market information • Guttman helps new students select and enter a program of study via its required Summer Bridge
Five programs Human Services Urban Studies Business Admin. Liberal Arts & Sciences I.T.
Guttman College • Students are required to enroll full-time & remedial instruction is embedded into college level courses • Each first-year student is assigned a Student Success Advocate that meets with them on a weekly basis in a dedicated advising seminar • In their second year, students work with a Career Strategist • Integrated Planning and Advising for Student Support (iPASS) • Allows Success Advocates to refer students to on-campus resources and functions as “early alert” system.
Guttman College: Evidence of Effectiveness • 80 of the 289 students in Guttman’s first cohort graduated with an associates degree within two years • Students were more than two times more likely to graduate in two years than students at similar institutions were able to graduate in three years • 31% two-year graduation rate among African American students • 50% two-year graduation rate among Hispanic students
Cross-Site Discussion of Pre-Work • Disaggregate graduates by award • count of graduates in each program in latest year • What were the median and mean units accumulated at time of graduation? • Which program had the highest units accumulated? The lowest? • Why is there such wide variation? • Decrease the average number of units accumulated by CCC students earning associate’s degrees, from approximately 87 total units to 79 total units
Conclusions • You cannot monitor a students progress along a program pathway unless you know that student’s program of study • Being able to disaggregate our student bodies is critical to becoming a guided pathways college • Students struggle to navigate the complexities of college and prefer receiving direction about how to attain their goals • Offering highly structured road maps tied to additional educational and/or employment opportunities increases the likelihood of program completion
There’s More on the Professional Learning Network A dynamic repository of effective practices, trainings and other resources (https://prolearningnetwork.cccco.edu/)
The DD ASK Team Jared Lessard gilgamesh80@gmail.com Gio Sosa giovanni.sosa@gmail.com Craig Hayward (team lead) chayward@rpgroup.org Carolyn Holcroft holcroftcarolyn@fhda.edu Andrew Kretz akretz@rpgroup.org
References Bailey, T., Jaggars, S. S., & Jenkins, D. (2015). What we know about guided pathways. New York, NY: Columbia University, Teachers College, Community College Research Center. Booth, K., Cooper, D., Karandjeff, K., Purnell, R., Schiorring, E., & Willett, T. (2013). What students say they need to succeed: Key themes from a study of student support. Sacramento, CA: Research and Planning Group for California Community Colleges. Retrieved from http://archive.rpgroup.org/sites/default/files/StudentPerspectivesResearchBriefJan2013.pdf Jenkins, D. (2014). Redesigning community colleges for student success: Overview of the guided pathways approach. New York, NY: Columbia University, Teachers College, Community College Research Center. Scott-Clayton, J. (2011). The structure of student decision-making at community colleges. New York, NY: Columbia University, Teachers College, Community College Research Center.
References (Cont’d) Strobel, N., & Christian, S. (2016). What is the “guided pathways model?”. Bakersfield, CA: Bakersfield College. Retrieved from http://extranet.cccco.edu/Portals/1/ExecutiveOffice/Board/2017_agendas/January/Item-3.3-Attachment-1-Pathways.pdf