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http:// www.lctcs.edu / workready -u/accelerating-opportunity. NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTEGRATED BASIC SKILLS PATHWAYS April 29-30, 2014 • Bellevue, WA. MAJOR PROGRESS MADE IN FIRST YEAR OF AO. Theresa Anderson & L auren Eyster The Urban Institute April 30, 2014.
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http://www.lctcs.edu/workready-u/accelerating-opportunity NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTEGRATED BASIC SKILLS PATHWAYS April 29-30, 2014 • Bellevue, WA
MAJOR PROGRESS MADE IN FIRST YEAR OF AO Theresa Anderson & Lauren EysterThe Urban Institute April 30, 2014
States & Colleges Primarily Focused on Building AO Pathways during First Year • Building pathways takes a lot of time & energy • Enrollment increased by 3rdsemester • Almost all colleges developed 2+ pathways in first year • Many colleges developed 3+ pathways https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRaEtf_YkEfD40bJHG4dyLW7o2ZK1c8I5tNCbr4Oc6YzOxjp4Wfjg
Pathways Active in Each Semester of the First Year of Implementation For IL, KS, KY, & NC, the first semester was Spring 2012; for LA, the first semester was Fall 2012. Source: AO College Survey.
Many AO Students Expressed Satisfaction with Their Pathway Program • Positive description of pathways in focus groups • Many students plan to continue higher education • Strong “word of mouth” recruitment https://ahc-assets-website-wsp.s3.amazonaws.com/styles/large/s3/pretty%20happy%20women%20ethnic.jpg?itok=r7egVsmN
Institutional Factors Played Important Role in Selection of AO Pathways • In selecting pathways, colleges considered: • Labor market demand • Cooperative CTE departments • CTE eligibility requirements • Pathways structures already in place • Student demand/interest http://timemanagementninja.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Which-path.jpg
Pathways Active in First Year of Implementation, by Industry Area Source: AO College Survey.
Attitudes Toward & Opportunities for Adult Education Students Beginning to Change • Faculty, staff, & students expressed willingness to open doors for adult education students • AO students from adult ed. started to identify as college students http://drprem.com/life/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2013/07/159301709.jpg
Instructors Used Mix of Team Teaching Approaches for AO Pathways • 88% of colleges implemented team teaching of some kind • Parity between teachers was not always achieved • Increasing buy-in for AO & team teaching among CTE faculty & staff is a major priority http://bornstoryteller.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/team_teaching.png
Team Teaching Approaches, First Year of Implementation N=37, Source: AO College Survey
Consistent & Comprehensive Network of Support Services – Still a Work-in-Progress • Students had access to academic support services at the college • Most AO programs had coordinators, coaches, & navigators • Some colleges reached out to partners to provide services • Some college staff & students were not aware of services available to students • Strengthening support services is an important policy lever for all states http://www.communitypartnersnh.org/wp-content/themes/nautilius/images/CommunitySupportServices.jpg
Selected Support Services Offered to AO Students, First Year of Implementation Source: AO College Survey
Loss of Ability to Benefit Caused Major Shift in Most Colleges’ Recruitment Strategies • Shifted recruitment towards students with a high school credential & basic skill needs • 60% of AO students had a high school credential at enrollment • 21% came from existing CTE programs • Decreased focus on adult ed. students who may have difficulty ever accessing college http://www.straighterline.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/image-archive/pell-grants.jpg
Recruitment Sources by State, First Year of Implementation Source: AO College Survey
Engagement of Workforce Partners Stronger than Employer Engagement • Colleges engaged workforce agencies & local CBOs • Some states created state-level partnerships with the workforce system • Partnerships with employers were still being formed & strengthened • Formed internal partnerships to facilitate the implementation of AO & gain buy-in http://www.canopy.org/media/advisory-board.jpg
Most Common External Partnerships, First Year of Implementation Source: AO College Survey
While First-Year Costs Varied, Most Resources Went to Staffing • Resources primarily went toward personnel • Costs rose by number of pathways offered & students served • State & college staff acknowledged the cost & effort of start-up • Expect to realize economies of scale as implementation progresses http://www.mikesroadtrip.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/investment-growth.jpg
States Supported AO Implementation; Built on Existing Infrastructure & Relationships • All states had experience with career pathway initiatives • States integrated AO with statewide goals to increase postsecondary degree completion https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/eihd/images/navajo.jpg
State Progress on Policy Levers, First Year of Implementation
States Engaged in Policy Change; Still Addressing Challenges • Worked toward policy change to support AO sustainability & scalability • Challenged by budget constraints • Leveraged AO to decision-makers in policy review to improve opportunities for low-skilled adults • State offices offered technical assistance, professional development, & AO oversight http://wlsappeals.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/iStock_000017765581Small.jpg
State Technical Assistance and Professional Development, First Year of Implementation
Questions? Theresa Anderson AO Evaluation Project Manager The Urban Institute tanderson@urban.org Lauren Eyster AO Evaluation Project Director The Urban Institute leyster@urban.org
NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTEGRATED BASIC SKILLS PATHWAYS April 29-30, 2014 • Bellevue, WA
New Funding for AO-K From the Department for Children and Families: • Up to $1.7million during FY 14 From Legislature: • $500,000 for use in AO-K Programs (Proviso to SB155) • $1,900,000 GED Accelerator (incentive for GEDs and CTE certificate)
Scaling Accelerating Opportunity in IL • Transitions Academy • An intensive one year project • Application process • Funded by Adult Education and Career and Technical Education • Face to face meetings, online courses, webinars, assignments, transitions blog, google group, mentors assigned, and a final presentation • Two-day Workshop • Day one is for the academy participants • Day two is open to the entire state • Expansion to 18 colleges • FY2015 adding 4-6 colleges
Louisiana’s New Attitude • 4th Anniversary of WorkReady U in July • Comprehensive Approach to Adult Ed. • Focus on the Undereducated and Underemployed • AE Scaled from 1 College to ALL 13 • Adult Learner Stereotypes Shattered • Partnership Network Aligned • Biggest AO Skeptics Embraced & Utilized • AO Scaled from 9 Colleges to ALL 13
Scaling & Sustaining • AOKY is Statewide! • Recruitment is Everybody’s Business • Team Teaching is an Equal Partnership • Next Frontier: AOKY 2.0
Communicating the Success Black Hawk College- 1st AO Cohort Illinois Community College Board Meeting • Transition Newsletter • Highlights a program • Events • Presentations: • Board Meetings • Community College Presidents Council • Community College Trustees Association • Community College Faculty • Chief Academic Officers • CTE/Perkins • P-20 Council • IL Longitudinal Data System Committee • Adult Education Program Directors • AO Report - Compendium • IL AO Video
The Opportunity to be Part of the Solution Louisiana’s Economic and Moral Imperative • 1 in 5 working aged citizens do NOT possess a HSE • The Skills Gap is widening – PIACC Report • Federal Financial Aid Guidelines – Barrier to Success • LA workforce needs are exploding • LWC projected increase of demand for workers = 236,000 through 2020 • LWC projected more than 621,000 new job opening through 2020 • Postsecondary Education in LA is changing – Wise Funding
NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTEGRATED BASIC SKILLS PATHWAYS April 29-30, 2014 • Bellevue, WA