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Development of SPC Baccalaureate Programs . A Model for Providing Baccalaureate Access to the Non-traditional Student . Florida’s first two-year college (founded in 1927) Comprehensive Community College Mission State’s First Community College authorized to offer baccalaureate degrees (2001)
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Development of SPC Baccalaureate Programs A Model for Providing Baccalaureate Access to the Non-traditional Student
Florida’s first two-year college (founded in 1927) • Comprehensive Community College Mission • State’s First Community College authorized to offer baccalaureate degrees (2001) • Fall Headcount Enrollment: 32,532 (credit) • Accredited by Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) About SPC
Deveron Gibbons – Chairman, Board of Trustees (sends regrets) • Bill Law, PhD – President • Anne Cooper, PhD – Senior VP Instruction and Academic Programs • James Coraggio, PhD – Associate VP Institutional Effectiveness, Research and Grants Presenters
Describe how SPC developed the 1st community college-based baccalaureate programs in Florida. • Provide information regarding the original rationale for creating the these baccalaureate programs • Describe the model for implementing and developing them. Session Goals
State is not prepared to meet economic demands due to limited baccalaureate access (Master Plan for Florida Postsecondary Education, 1998) • Florida ranked 46 out of 50 states in Baccalaureate access • Community College System developed a strategic plan on Baccalaureate access Florida Need
Ranked 67 of 67 counties in Baccalaureate access • Employers identified needs for IT managers, teachers, BSN educated nurses • Geographic uniqueness: • Peninsula with heavy traffic volume • Most densely populated county in Florida Pinellas County Need
Provided SPC the authority to offer four-year baccalaureate degrees (2001) • Included a million dollar appropriation for start-up costs (multi-year commitment) • Three areas of emphasis • Teacher Education • BSN Nursing • Technology Management New Legislation
SPC has produced 6,432 baccalaureate graduates since inception • Of the 2011-12 graduates (in-state) • 78% are employed with an average annual wage of $42,890 • 14% are continuing their education • Over 1,200 SPC graduates a year which leads the other 22 state colleges Making Public Policy Work
Growth of SPC Baccalaureate Program Making Public Policy Work
Originally began at 20% less than state universities • Has now widened to 44% Note: In-state tuition of 30 credit hours Finance Formula
Be ‘true’ to the historical Community College Mission • Maintain an ‘open-door’ policy and keep instruction as a top priority • Serve our ‘community’ with 4-year workforce focused bachelor’s degrees in high need areas • Seamless integration of services for all students SPC Challenge
Mirror State University System academic policies for quality • Time to degree: 120 hours • Common pre-requisites • Specialized accreditation • Ability of graduates to transfer into state/ private graduate programs • 74% of UD faculty with PhDs or terminal degree Quality Degree Standards
Startup initially included some separate resources until critical mass was reached Move to One College included… • Combined Governance • Individual Colleges: One Dean • One curriculum and instruction process • One planning and budgeting process • Seamless and integrated approach to student resources • Financial Aid, Library Services, and Student Services Becoming One College
Current and projected labor market analysis (number of current and needed professionals in field) • Employer and student surveys • DACUM Process - interactive session with field practitioners to gather information on necessary skills and traits • Over 450 Advisory Committees – assist in developing and improving academic programs Program Development
Fall 2013 • 4,067 Headcount Enrollment • Older: 34.5% are 36 or older • Part-Time : 68.2% (Avg.=8 CHs) • Female: 66.4% • Diversity: 72.1% White; 9.8% Black/African American; and 9.0% Hispanic/Latino • Online Only: 58.8% of students • New Students: 221 students were ‘new’ to SPC Student Demographics
Program Outcomes SPC produces non-traditional workforce focused graduates: • Older: Median age is 31 with one third over the age of 36 • Committed: Ninety percent completed the program within 3 years with almost all enrolled at least one summer term (94%) • Employed: Over three quarters (78%) are employed with an average annual wage of $37,325 for education majors and $51,178 for non-education majors • Local: Three quarters of graduates received their previous degree within the local area.
Leadership support and commitment • Quality degree standards and stay ‘true’ to community college teaching and learning mission • Program majors from high demand workforce areas by collaborating with industry • Initial funds for planning and implementation • Seamless integration of resources for students • One College focus Keys to Success
Florida Department of Education • http://www.fldoe.org/fcs/ • SPC • Djuan Fox, Baccalaureate Liaison Fox.djuan@spcollege.edu or (727)341-3334 • Baccalaureate Website http://www.spcollege.edu/bachelordegrees/ Resources