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CONNECT SYMPOSIUM FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF BOSTON. Janice M. Bonanno Associate Vice President of Student Services Bunker Hill Community College January 19, 2012. Community College Students. National Center for Educational Statistics identifies non- traditional students as those who:
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CONNECT SYMPOSIUMFEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF BOSTON Janice M. Bonanno Associate Vice President of Student Services Bunker Hill Community College January 19, 2012
Community College Students • National Center for Educational Statistics identifies non- traditional students as those who: • Delay their college enrollment after high school; work full-time; have dependents; are single parents; are first in family to attend college • For some of the students who we want to move to middle skill levels, English is not their first language or they cannot speak English; they are Veterans; and some have been incarcerated • Most likely, they are academically underprepared for college and come from poor families
Public Policy Issues Related to Community College Students • Poverty • According to the US Census, more than 46 million people in the USA live below the poverty level • Almost 75% of all community college students in Massachusetts qualify as being in low income families • According to an American Council on Education Brief, 81% of community college students must work an average of 30 hours per week while going to school • Various studies have found that most students leave College due to financial reasons, yet there are plans to reduce Pell Grant eligibility in FY 2012
Public Policy Issues Continued • Poverty (Cont’d.) • Contrast those facts to an Education Trust Report, indicating that 75 % of students from the top income quartile receive a Bachelor’s degree by age 24 • Immigrants • Youth who are brought to this country by their parents and graduate from high school here need to pay in-state tuition at our public colleges and universities • Immigrant students will stay, work, and contribute to our communities • This is a potential source of skilled labor that our country cannot afford to waste
Public Policy Issues Continued • Massachusetts community colleges are chronically underfunded in serving emerging populations that contribute to regional workforce • There is insufficient classroom space; BHCC midnight courses • The facilities are in need of maintenance and equipment • Focused and targeted funds received would be invested in our state’s and region’s future, such as the Vision Project • Workforce development system • There is wide agreement that the workforce development system is too diffuse for individuals to navigate • The monies flow to no less that 40 – 50 different agencies spread across the State
New Recognition of Community College Value to Massachusetts Economic Development • Governor Patrick appointed an Economic Development Planning Council in spring 2011 • The Council was a collaborative effort of individuals and institutions in the public and private sectors, including academia • The meetings were open and attended by business, education, and union representatives • The Council issued a very significant report in November 2011
Findings from Report • Community colleges are an integral part of the workforce development system • Innovative-based industry clusters drive the Massachusetts economy • Well-established industry sectors • Health Care; higher education, technology, financial services, • Emerging sectors • Life sciences, clean energy, creative economy • The report recommends increasing education and workforce development for middle-skills jobs through regional collaboration among these sectors
Massachusetts Community College Gains Sited in Report • There has been a: • 21.3% increase in the number of degrees awarded in past five years • 36.6% increase in the number of certificates awarded in past five years • 18.9% increase in the number of workforce courses delivered in past five years • 26.8% increase in number of individuals participating in workforce development /job skills training
Bunker Hill Community College Initiatives Addressing Public Policy Issues • Massachusetts Competitive Partnership • Is a non-profit, non-partisan, public policy group comprised of CEOs of some of the Commonwealth’s largest businesses • Goals are to promote job growth and competitiveness in the Commonwealth, working in collaboration with public officials, business and civic leaders in Massachusetts • The Massachusetts Competitive Partnership collaboration with Bunker Hill Community College is a unique corporate/higher education workforce development model
BHCC and Massachusetts Competitive Partnership - Model • Is a pilot program that includes Raytheon, Suffolk Construction; State Street Bank; BJ’s Wholesale Club, and EMC • Major component of the program is an Learn and Earn Program • BHCC provides focused workforce curriculum • Corporations provide job opportunities for students. • A supervisor and mentor are assigned to the students and group learning sessions are arranged by the companies • Companies offer paid student internships and transportation stipends • Assignments identified to date include: Finance; sales operations; HR training; IT; social media marketing; paralegal; engineering
Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics (STEM) • BHCC Biotechnology Programs received the endorsement of the Mass Life Science Education Consortium for BHCC’s work in aligning college programs with industry needs • BHCC students participate in summer internships in Biology, Bio technology, Chemistry, Bio Medical Engineering, and Engineering • Internships are provided at Tufts, MIT, BU, UMass Boston, Harvard, Dana Farber, Brandies • BHCC is a partner in the Urban Massachusetts Lewis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation Grant • Grant targets under-represented students of color • BHCC delivers the curriculum including study groups • Students receive a stipend for internship at research labs
BHCC Best Practices – Student Emergency Assistance Fund • Initiated by President Fifield in 2009 through a Met Life Grant, institutional funding, and a contribution from the College’s Student Government Association • Provids grants up to $1,000 per year; average award $730 • Funded emergencies include: unanticipated job loss; housing situation changed; health issue; natural disaster; T pass/auto, glasses broken, family crisis (such as change in day care) • Retention is up to 22% higher for recipients • Successful course completion rate is up to 12% higher
Best Practices – Single Stop USA and Bunker Hill Community College • Is a National non-profit organization that partners with trusted community colleges to obtain private funding that will enable the community college to connect students and their families with state and federal resources such as: • Food stamps; health insurance, • Financial counseling • Free tax preparation (tax credits) • Legal assistance (housing issues) • Program impact • Enables Bunker Hill Community College to help more students address economic barriers so more students will graduate • Lifts families out of poverty and helps them achieve economic mobility
BHCC Best Practices – Welcome Back Center • Mission The Welcome Back Center assists internationally educated nurses who are Massachusetts residents who earned their credentials outside of the United States to obtain Massachusetts state licensure so they can re-enter the nursing workforce. • The Program is a partnership with Roxbury Community College, Mass Bay Community College, UMass Boston, and the Department of Higher Education
Welcome Back Center Demographics and Accomplishments Since 2006 • There have been 798 participants from 112 countries • The top countries include: Haiti, China, Brazil, Nepal, Nigeria, Russia, Philippines, Ukraine, Ethiopia, Puerto Rico • LPN 38 • RN ASN 102 • RN BSN 45 • Employment: 142 of the 185 graduates were employed at the time of graduation in hospitals and other health care facilities