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Student Access, Retention, and Success. Faculty Council Discussion February 6. Assistant VPSA/ Assistant to VPUA. Learning Communities. Course Redesign. Campus Climate. Vice Provost for Enrollment and Access. Vice Provost for Undergraduate Affairs. Vice President for Student Affairs.
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Student Access, Retention, and Success Faculty Council Discussion February 6
Assistant VPSA/ Assistant to VPUA Learning Communities Course Redesign Campus Climate Vice Provost for Enrollment and Access Vice Provost for Undergraduate Affairs Vice President for Student Affairs Coordinating Committee on Undergraduate Student Success Learning Center Advising, Early Warning, Advising Policies Pre-College Programs
Will our efforts make a difference? Students who will stay, no matter what we do Students who will leave, no matter what we do Students whose choices will vary with the nature of their educational experience and ties to the university community
CSU: Attrition by University GPA:Class of 2000 Adapted from the Office of Budgets and Institutional Analysis Freshman Retention Report
Most Who Leave Depart Early… 50% of those who will leave have done so by end of freshman year; 83% by end of sophomore year (Class entering 1999) Adapted from the Office of Budgets and Institutional Analysis Freshman Retention Report
Nonresident Students: Graduates and still enrolled after 5 years 10 point gap, 2000 cohort Source: Office of Budgets and Institutional Analysis Freshman Retention Study
Students of Color: Cumulative Graduation Rate 8 percentage point gap by sixth year
First Generation Students: Cumulative Graduation Rate 7 percentage point gap by sixth year
Pell Recipients: Cumulative Graduation Rate 8.2 percentage point gap by sixth year
Controlling simultaneously for multiple factors: Logistic Regression Analysis Six-Year Graduation Odds (Odds of graduating within six years in relation to a comparison group)
Race/Ethnicity After adjusting for effects due to all other variables (gender, residency, first generation, and Index), The odds of a student of color graduating within 6 years are from .567 to .727 as great as for a white student
After adjusting for effects due to all other variables (ethnic/racial group, gender, first generation, and Index)… *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1
After adjusting for effects due to all other variables (ethnic/racial group, gender, residency, and Index)… *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1
After adjusting for effects due to all other variables (ethnic/racial group, residency, first generation, and Index)… *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1
After adjusting for effects due to all other variables (ethnic/racial group, gender, residency, and first generation)… Note: Almost all of the positive effect of Index is attributable to the High School GPA factor within the Index. Standardized tests (ACT or SAT scores) contribute little to the prediction. *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1
Retention Trend CCHE Goal: 85.1% (Dec. 08)
Graduation Trend (6-year rate) CCHE Goal: 63.6% (Dec. 08)
CSU Retention and Graduation: National Comparison with 4-Year, Public, Selective, Doctoral-Granting Institutions (ACT, 2005)
University of Washington6-Year Graduation Rate Trend Graduation gain over fifteen years = 13.4 percentage points
University of Maryland(College Park):6-Year Graduation Rate Trend Graduation gain over five years = 11.5 percentage points
Assistant VPSA/ Assistant to VPUA Learning Communities Course Redesign Campus Climate Vice Provost for Enrollment and Access Vice Provost for Undergraduate Affairs Vice President for Student Affairs Coordinating Committee on Undergraduate Student Success Learning Center Advising, Early Warning, Advising Policies Pre-College Programs