1 / 15

Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

StriveTogether Framework Missy McNabb Vice President of Education Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014.

lars
Download Presentation

Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. StriveTogether FrameworkMissy McNabbVice President of EducationMetro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  2. Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  3. Ready By 21 SnapshotJanet E. Rechtman, Ph.D.Senior Fellow, J.W. Fanning Institute for Leadership Development Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  4. Ready By 21: A Vision of Community Support for Education Cradle to Career Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  5. RB21 Education Collaborative Network

  6. Project GRAD AtlantaNanette Lee Reynolds, Ed.D.Executive DirectorProject GRAD Atlanta Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  7. Collaboration Changes Conversations • The RB21 conversation has influenced conversations about education in a number of ways: •  We’ve changed the conversation on the ground in communities like Clarkston where meetings with community leaders and members RB21 are building trust, identifying needs and mobilizing resources in the Atlanta region’s most diverse community. • We’ve changed the conversation about direct services – through the P3 with the leadership of GCAPP, where nonprofit leaders work together to align their programs and resources with support for education. •  We’ve changed the conversation about measuring results – RB21 partners at Emory and DOE, along with other “data coaches” are working in a variety of ways to increase the clarity, accuracy and utility of the measures we use to track progress. This includes an unprecedented partnership with DOE to share aggregate data about student achievement to assist communities and nonprofits in planning and delivering needed services. Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  8. Impact Increases when Leaders Connect • Partners share assets, knowledge and experience to create widespread, high quality support for students, families and teachers as they move through the education pipeline. • Excitement and support from the business community for financially supporting the STRIVE initiative • The work of ARC in researching best practice education models/programs as part of its regional economic competitiveness strategy • United Way’s passion for improving the quality of life for the Atlanta region • The Community Foundation’s commitment to community engagement. Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  9. PERSISTENT EQUITY GAPS IN EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT • Education remains a civil rights issue, because, unfortunately, equal educational opportunity remains elusive for far, far too many. Those at the “short end of the stick” are defined as historically disenfranchised or marginalized. • The postsecondary education attainment rates among low-income students and students of color are documented as significantly lower than those of other students. The rates are inclusive of enrollment in professional/technical certificate and academic degree programs, at both 2 and 4 year levels of study. • In metropolitan Atlanta, these youth are: • Low income, food insecure, lacking of health care, suffering from mental and/or physical disabilities • Homeless or in foster care • Students are overwhelmingly enrolled in Title I schools • First generation graduating from high school and/or attending college • Racial/ethnic, language minority students, and children of undocumented immigrants • While these young people are no less deserving of quality educational opportunities than your children or mine …the vision of college must be strategically placed before them. Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  10. THE COLLEGE ACCESS CONTINUUM A broad, complex, intensive, and intrusive complement of resources, services, and experiences requisite to motivate, encourage and sustain our students on a college-going and completion path Awareness Readiness Access Affordability Persistence to Attainment Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  11. FRAMEWORK FOR INCREASING EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT THROUGH THE LENS OF COLLECTIVE IMPACT Our topic for the day! Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  12. Georgia State UniversityMark P. Becker, Ph.D.PresidentGeorgia State University Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  13. Georgia State University Students (2012-2013) • First Generation 8,540* • Pell students 12,532 • Adult learners 6,001 • Veterans 776* • Asian Americans 2,935 • African Americans 9,887 • Hispanics/Latinos 2,307 •  *actual numbers are higher; conservative estimates based on one indicator Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  14. Targeted Student Success Programs • Structured Interventions: Data-based, Experiment, Pilot, Revise, Scale; e.g., • Peer Tutoring in High DFW Courses • Predictive Analytics and Proactive Advising • Strategic Allocation of Financial Aide: Panther Retention Grants • Summer Success Academy: Intensive Advisement, Academic Skills & Financial Literacy Training • Keep HOPE Alive: HOPE Retention Rate increased from 49% to 75% in 5 years • Freshmen Learning Communities: GPA, Retention, Graduation ALL Are Higher • Course Redesign: College Algebra DFW Rate dropped from 43% to 21% Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

  15. Making a Difference G R A D U A T I O N Pell Rate Metropolitan Atlanta College Access Summit June 11, 2014

More Related