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Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students. Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Frederick S. Foster-Clark, Daniel F. O’Neill, Laurie Hanich, and Carol Y. Phillips
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Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Frederick S. Foster-Clark, Daniel F. O’Neill, Laurie Hanich, and Carol Y. Phillips Millersville University of Pennsylvania Presented at AAC&U’s Network for Academic Renewal conference, General Education and Assessment: Engaging Critical Questions, Fostering Critical Learning, Miami, FL, March 1, 2007
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students FYE Assessment Team Dr. Fred Foster-Clark General Education Coordinator Dr. Linda McDowell First Year Experiences Coordinator Dr. Daniel O’Neill Counseling and Human Development Dr. Laurie Hanich Educational Foundations Dr. Thomas Burns Associate Provost for Academic Administration Dr. Carol Phillips Associate Provost Emerita Ms. Kris Vitucci Graduate Assistant
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Profile of Millersville University • Undergrad enrollment - 7200 • 91% fulltime • 14% minority • 96% instate (Pennsylvania) • Entering fall 2006 class of 1363 students (new freshman) – • Mean SATs = 1050; • Mean Percentile Rank = 69% • 12th Ranked Public in US News & World Report’s Master’s Universities in the North • Top Majors: • Business Administration (892) • Elementary Education (808) • Undecided (785) • Biology (503) • Psychology (449) • Industry & Technology (444) • Communications (438)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students The Charge • Started FYE in Fall 2001: Outgrowth of the Student Alcohol Abuse Task Force recommendations • Develop potential models for a holistic first-year program to encourage: • Social engagement • Civic engagement • Intellectual engagement • Components to be included: • Enhanced advisement • Seminar course, the integrating element • Living/learning community with related programming
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Components All freshman housing Special programming (WOW*) Peer mentors Team building experiences Community building Tutoring on-site *”What’s on Wednesday” Outcomes Students make friends, congregate in groups Students form study groups with classmates Students like the residence hall experience Students involved in campus life Collaboration with Student Affairs/Resident Life
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students UNIV 101 1-credit extended orientation Seminar with linked fundamentals course (i.e., ENGL 110 or COMM 100) Socratic format Problem-based learning Co-curricular/ extracurricular assignments Service-learning Faculty as advisor UNIV 179 3-credit, content-rich passion Seminar linked with fundamentals course General education credit Co-curricular/ extracurricular assignments Service-learning Faculty may or may not serve as advisor Seminar/Learning Community Models
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students • Components of the First-Year Perspectives • FY Perspectives course paired with first-year fundamental course (Composition or Speech) • Living-learning connection (Students live together in Freshman residence halls) • Service Learning (15 hours recommended) • Attentive advising by seminar instructors with support from Resident Life and Exploratory programs • Peer mentors (live in residence halls; one assigned to each seminar)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students First Year Perspectives (UNIV 179) First Year Perspectives (FYP) is a component of General Education specifically designed for first semester students and offered in a seminar format, typically linked to a foundations course (either ENGL 110 or COMM 100) as a part of a living/learning community. A major function of these seminars is to introduce a process of critical inquiry applied to important social, cultural, scientific, technological, and/or aesthetic problems. Each FYP course will introduce multiple perspectives related to the understanding and resolution of these problems.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students First Year Perspectives (UNIV 179) Common learning objectives: • Communicating orally and in writing • Obtaining and evaluating information (information literacy) • Engaging in critical inquiry • Appreciating the importance of civic engagement • Understanding the importance of a liberal arts education • Making a successful transition into university life, both academically and socially
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students First-Year Perspectives Topics (Fall 2006) • Dream of America • Why We Hate • Facing Fear • Homes and Homelessness • The Amish and the Media • Witchcraft in 17th Century England and New England • Our Bodies/Ourselves: Sexuality and Gender in the Global Village • A Different View: How Can We Change the World? • Scientific Revolutions: An Exploration of Method • Culture, Science and Mathematics in the Pre-Columbian Americas • Food or Free Speech? Human Rights and You • The Monsters Under Our Beds • Liberty and Justice for All: The Promise of American Education • The Deindustrialization of America: Jobs Today, Gone Tomorrow
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Fall 2005 Pilot-test Evaluation Methods • 110 of the 284 Exploratory (Undecided) students were randomly assigned to the pilot-test program • Pilot-test students assigned to one of five learning community topics based on their stated preferences • Students completed mid-semester and end-of-semester Web-based surveys • Focus group of pilot-test students held at end of semester by assessment staff • Instructors completed opened-ended surveys • Students followed to check academic progress and persistence
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Freshman Year Mid-Term Survey – Fall 2005 Results Students in the freshman seminar had more serious conversations with different students, worked more with classmates outside of class, researched for a paper more, contributed more to class, and came to class more prepared than students who were not in a freshman seminar.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Fall 2006 Assessment Components • Pretest-Posttest Survey • Higher Education Values Inventory (HEVI) • Openness to Diversity & Challenge • Pretest-Posttest Open-Ended Responses • Civic Responsibility • Liberal Arts • Information Literacy Assessment (forthcoming) • NSSE (End of spring term) • End-of-Semester Focus Groups (students) • Faculty Survey • Persistence/Retention
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Comparison of Pre-Test/Post-Test Means (Fall 2006) • Note: N’s ranged from 212 to 215; standard deviations in parentheses. • Ranges: • HEVI Subscales: (0 = strongly disagree to 4 = strongly agree) • Openness to Diversity/Challenge Scale: (1 = strongly disagree to 5 = strongly agree)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Writing Prompts(Fall 2006) Civic Responsibility • What is civic responsibility? [pre- & post-] • How has your understanding of civic responsibility changed as a result of your experiences this semester? What in particular had an impact? [posttest only] Liberal Arts • What is a liberal arts education? [pre- & post-] • How has your understanding of a liberal arts education changed as a result of your experiences this semester? What in particular had an impact? [posttest only]
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Responses to Liberal Arts Writing Prompt(Pretest -- Fall 2006)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Responses to Civic Responsibility Writing Prompt (Pretest-Fall 2006)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Levels of Elaboration in Writing Prompts (Pretest -- Fall 2006)
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Comparison of Pre-Test/Post-Test Means (Fall 2006) Note: N = 108 for Liberal Arts coding; N = 106 for Liberal Arts coding; standard deviations in parentheses.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Pretest and Posttest Responses – Conceptions of the Liberal Arts – Fall 2006
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Criteria for Information Literacy Competency The student… • Identifies a variety of types and formats of potential sources. • Summarizes the main ideas. • Synthesizes main ideas to construct new concepts. • Compares new knowledge with prior knowledge to determine the value added, contradictions, or other unique characteristics of information. • Applies new and prior information to the planning and creation of the essay. Being assessed by Library faculty using a sample of 41 student papers drawn from five different sections of UNIV 179.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students The Seminar/Learning Community Really focused in depth on one area Service-learning really opened my eyes I got to pick the class Made lots of friends –living and studying together Professor knew everybody; small class great Peer mentors really helpful The Living Community Really liked living together Appreciated the fact that we were all freshmen going thru the same things Easier being with people in the same situation Great for working on group presentations and studying Peer mentors lived with us and helped us with classes, with adjustment and registration Liked the relational aspects the best Student Focus Group Findings 2006
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Faculty Reactions: Rewards • “Energizing--got me out of a teaching rut!” • “I enjoyed a chance to spread my wings after a steady diet of required courses.” • “Camaraderie with other faculty” • “Got to know students well—both academically and personally.” • “Being both teacher and advisor made me better at both!” • “I could convey to students that college involves a high level of intellectual rigor…students rose to my high expectations.” • “I enjoyed seeing the students blossom. They came in quiet and reserved and by the end of the semester they were engaging in discussion and debate.” • “Students were ‘incredible’…attendance was phenomenal, the students were engaged, they participated, and they asked questions routinely. It was like teaching seniors.” • “The students knew each other very well, and they often worked on course material or discussed that material in the dorms.”
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Faculty Reactions: Challenges • Developing a brand new course involves a tremendous amount of work and preparation. • Choosing the course topic well. The ideal topic “has clear impact on students’ personal lives…and can be treated with academic integrity.” • Balancing course content and goals with attention to students’ general academic and personal progress • Service Learning component is often the most difficult part of the course to administer. Identifying service opportunities, arranging transportation and other logistics etc. requires considerable advance planning and coordination with other campus offices. • “Students didn’t get the seminar concept. At the beginning of the semester they were frustrated I wasn’t lecturing. I need to better prepare them for what a seminar is.”
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Persistence into Sophomore Year for Exploratory Students at Millersville – Fall 2001 to Fall 2005
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Starting small and building up • Close collaboration between Academic and Student Affairs • Faculty development • Early and heavy use of assessment data • Learning how to do assessment better • Getting innovations to fit existing curricular structures
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Starting small and building up • Began with more traditional one-credit FYE as experimental course, evolved and developed itself, morphed into three-credit passion seminar. • New FYE programming started as small pilot-test with assessment opportunities, expanded in second and third years, with full adoption planned for Year 4.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Close collaboration between Academic and Student Affairs • Brings the living and learning together • Tutoring in dorms, study groups, and support programming benefits student learning and student socialization • Faculty more attuned to student learning and advisement needs • Maximizes the “bang for the buck”
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Faculty development • Outside experts (e.g., Jodi Levine Laufgraben, Peggy Maki, John Gardner, Randy Swing,Steven Briggs, Ed Zlotkowski, Nancy King, Ed Napieralski, John O’Connor, Doug Howard) brought to campus for consultation & training • Spring/summer workshop • Continued opportunities for discussion and faculty development during semester • End-of-term follow-up luncheon/workshop • Peer mentor training
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Early and heavy use of assessment data • Use of assessment for program development • Use of assessment to justify expansion • Learning how to do assessment better
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Conclusion: Lessons Learned • Getting innovations to fit existing curricular structures • Counting for credit in General Education • Faculty and department buy-in
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Thanks for attending our presentation. We hope our work is helpful to you in your own program development and assessment efforts. Further information is available from our website: http://muweb.millersville.edu/~gened/ Contact information follows on the next slide.
Engagement and Retention: Assessment of a General Education Initiative for First-Year Students Contact Information Frederick S. Foster-Clark, Department of Psychology and Coordinator of General Education Email: Frederick.Foster-Clark@millersville.edu Phone: 717-872-3933 Daniel F. O’Neill, Department of Counseling and Human Development Email: Daniell.O’Neill@millersville.edu Phone: 717-872-3122 Laurie B. Hanich, Department of Educational Foundations Email: Laurie.Hanich@millersville.edu Phone: 717-871-2231 Linda L. McDowell, Department of Educational Foundations and Coordinator of First Year Experiences Email: Linda.McDowell@millersville.edu Phone: 717-871-2388 Thomas D. Burns, Associate Provost for Academic Administration Email: Thomas.Burns@millersville.edu Phone: 717-872-3703 Carol Y. Phillips, Associate Provost Emerita Email: Carol.Phillips@millersville.edu Phone: 717-872-3703 Go to http://muweb.millersville.edu/~gened/ for information about our Gen Ed program and FYE efforts.