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Best Practice Approaches to Improving Retention for First Year Students

Best Practice Approaches to Improving Retention for First Year Students. Prof Kate Greenan Carol Reid. Context of Research. Widening participation Student:Staff Ratios Accountability Enhancing the Student Experience – social & academic integration. Widening Participation.

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Best Practice Approaches to Improving Retention for First Year Students

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  1. Best Practice Approaches to Improving Retention for First Year Students • Prof Kate Greenan • Carol Reid STAR Conference June 2007

  2. Context of Research • Widening participation • Student:Staff Ratios • Accountability • Enhancing the Student Experience – social & academic integration STAR Conference June 2007

  3. Widening Participation • “by 2010, 50% of all British 18 to 30 year olds should have experienced or be currently participating in higher education” (Bennett & Kottasz, 2006) STAR Conference June 2007

  4. Student:Staff ratios (Source: Times Top Universities 2007 League Table) STAR Conference June 2007

  5. Accountability • “ In his study of non-completion in the United Kingdom, Yorke (1999) estimated the annual cost to the taxpayer of early student departure as around £100 million” (Zepke & Leach, 2005) • Increased focus on retention and performance • Retention - emphasis on the first year student experience • Performance – emphasis on completion and final awards STAR Conference June 2007

  6. Background to FDTL 5 project • Quality in Business Education (QuBE) • Partners: City University (Cass), Winchester, Oxford Brookes, Leeds Metropolitan, Nottingham Trent, UU • Excellence Agenda http://www.qube.ac.uk/QuBE/toolbox/cases/studsuppcases STAR Conference June 2007

  7. 1st Year Case Studies • Social integration: Napier, Teesside • Academic integration: Portsmouth, Brighton, Northumbria, Teesside, Aston STAR Conference June 2007

  8. Social Integration • Changing student circumstances (increased part-time working and living at home) • Need to engender “belongingness” • Napier – Induction (interaction and socialisation) and Post induction (communication and pastoral) • Teesside – Mature students’ Induction (Tailored, empathetic and supportive) STAR Conference June 2007

  9. Academic Integration • Commonly through Study Skills module • Variety modes, approaches and class/group sizes – each valid and situation specific • Importance of team approach and whole team “buy-in”, integrated and seamless approach • Involvement with student mentors, employers and central units STAR Conference June 2007

  10. Common Themes underpinning Successful Approaches • Willingness to address the problem • Clear support from senior management • Staff champion(s) • Support & engagement of teaching staff • Multi-faceted role of the academic • Seamless integration between central and local support & across the curriculum • Flexible delivery & assessment, tailored to student & programme needs STAR Conference June 2007

  11. Multi-faceted Role of the Academic Elton (1990) • regards high teaching quality as quintessential to excellence in higher education • Argues that there has to be change in attitudes amongst certain academics who believe that their main task is to profess their discipline • Such academics consider that they are professors or lecturers rather than teachers or facilitators of learning STAR Conference June 2007

  12. Digital Natives & Digital Immigrants STAR Conference June 2007

  13. Digital Natives & Digital Immigrants • “Students today are “native speakers” of the digital language of computers, video games and the Internet” • “Digital Immigrant instructors, who speak an outdated language (that of the pre-digital age), are struggling to teach a population that speaks an entirely new language” (Prensky, 2001) STAR Conference June 2007

  14. Concluding Thoughts • Understanding, empathising & responding to differences • Multi-tasking a priority • Must engage students at the very first encounter • Track those who miss to encourage them – using their means of communication! • Must think and manage way beyond the classroom encounter • Smaller groups (within groups) essential STAR Conference June 2007

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