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Student Engagement: Social Networking and Student Success. May 26, 2010 • IOL 2010. Karla A. Fisher, Ph.D. College Relations Coordinator Center for Community College Student Engagement Kerry K. Mix, Ph.D. Research Assistant Center for Community College Student Engagement. Session Agenda.
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Student Engagement: Social Networking and Student Success • May 26, 2010 • IOL 2010
Karla A. Fisher, Ph.D.College Relations CoordinatorCenter for Community College Student Engagement • Kerry K. Mix, Ph.D.Research AssistantCenter for Community College Student Engagement Center for Community College Student Engagement
Session Agenda • Our research center • Our population • Data available to researchers • Findings on social networking in colleges • Institutional examples Center for Community College Student Engagement
“I need someone well versed in the art of torture…Do you know PowerPoint?” Center for Community College Student Engagement
Who we are… • Research and service initiative of the Community College Leadership Program • Fee-for-service and grant-funded • Committed to improving student outcomes in community colleges • Committed to preparing leaders and researchers in our field Center for Community College Student Engagement
Who we study… • 11. 8 million community college students (6.8M credit, 5M noncredit) • 60% enrolled part-time • 28 years / average age (46% are under 21) • 56% female • 40% minority • 42% first generation to attend college • (AACC, 2010) Center for Community College Student Engagement
Who we study… • 43% of all U.S. undergraduates • 40% of all first-time college freshman • 52% of Native American undergraduates • 45% of Asian/Pacific Islander undergraduates • 45% of Black undergraduates • 53% of Hispanic undergraduates • (AACC, 2010) 40% Minority Center for Community College Student Engagement
What is student engagement? …the amount of time and energy students invest in meaningful educational practices …the institutional practices and student behaviors that are highly correlated with student learning and retention Center for Community College Student Engagement
Students are more likely to persist and learn if they… Establish relationships with faculty, staff, and peers Feel connected to the college Successfully navigate through college systems, processes, and procedures Have an academic plan and set goals Are active and engaged learners Are challenged to do their best work Center for Community College Student Engagement
Our research includes… • Quantitative • CCSSE • CCFSSE • SENSE • SOSE • Qualitative • Initiative on Student Success / Starting Right Center for Community College Student Engagement
CCCSE Tools for Improvement • Assess quality in community college education • Identify and propagate good educational practice • Identify areas in which colleges can improve • Help shift the focus to institutional locus of control CCCSE also: • Publicly reports data • Opposes ranking of community colleges ranking Center for Community College Student Engagement
CCCSE Offers Data for Researchers • CCSSE 2002-2010 • 755 colleges from 49 states plus Alberta, British Columbia, Bermuda, Marshall Islands, Northern Marianas, Nova Scotia, Ontario, and Quebec • 1,771,724 respondents (rep total enroll. of 5,206,557) • CCFSSE 2005-2010 • 367 colleges from 45 states plus the Marshall islands • 45,000 respondents • SENSE 2007-2009 • 203 colleges from 36 states plus the Marshall and Marianas Islands • 230,000+ respondents (rep total enrollment of 1,390,000) Center for Community College Student Engagement
What is CCSSE? • Paper-and-pencil survey • 123 items • 25 demographic items • 98 engagement items • Additional items – 5 per year • Frequency and agreement response categories • Psychometric analysis & validation study Center for Community College Student Engagement
Benchmarks of Effective Educational Practice • CCSSE Benchmarks • Student-Faculty Interaction • Active and Collaborative Learning • Student Effort • Academic Challenge • Support for Learners Center for Community College Student Engagement
CCSSE Benchmarks for Effective Educational Practice CCSSE Example Community College 2009 Benchmark Scores Center for Community College Student Engagement
2009 CCSSE Cohort • 2007 - 2009 • Quantitative data from: • 400,000+ students • 600 institutions • 48 states, plus the MarshallIslands and Nova Scotia • Qualitative data • College vignettes • Cultivating Connections: • In virtual space • In the classroom • On campus • Beyond the campus Center for Community College Student Engagement
Social Networking • Social construction of knowledge • “Academic social networking is a concept that refers to the building of connections and relationships among a community of learners” (Ciez-Volz, 2009-2010). • Web 2.0 • “…a new era of Web-enabled applications that are built around user-generated or user-manipulated content, such as wikis, blogs, podcasts, and social networking sites” (Pew, 2009). Center for Community College Student Engagement
How often do you use social networking tools for any purpose? Center for Community College Student Engagement
Students’ use of social networking tools to communicate about coursework? Center for Community College Student Engagement
Colleges’ use of social networking tools to communicate about services? Center for Community College Student Engagement
Dissertation:ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKING: EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN USE OF WEB-BASED SOCIAL TECHNOLOGIES ANDCOMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENT ENGAGEMENT (Mix, 2010) • CCSSE 2009 • 312 U.S. community colleges in 38 state • 179,936 max response • Five special-focus survey items • Institutional Social Networking Inventory (ISNI) • 83 colleges • Campus Voice & Student Voice Center for Community College Student Engagement
Used SNT for any purpose Center for Community College Student Engagement (Mix, 2010)
Used SNT to communicate about coursework Center for Community College Student Engagement (Mix, 2010)
College use of SNT to communicate about services Center for Community College Student Engagement (Mix, 2010)
Dissertation: STUDENT ENGAGEMENT IN COMMUNITY COLLEGE ONLINE EDUCATION PROGRAMS: AN EXPLORATION OF SIX CONSTRUCTS WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE (Fisher, 2010) • Survey of Online Student Engagement • 215 items (59 survey questions) • 192 content items • 23 demographic items • 2,085 respondents at five research sites • 43% online courses exclusively • 57% online and on-campus courses Center for Community College Student Engagement
Online students less likely to use SNT Center for Community College Student Engagement (Fisher, 2010)
One thing we KNOW about community college student engagement… • It’s unlikely to happen by accident. • It has to happen • by design. Center for Community College Student Engagement
Phillips Community College (AR) • Has actively encouraged faculty members to use Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking tools for academic purposes. For example, at in-service activities, the chancellor personally encourages faculty to use Facebook. Phillips plans to administer CCSSE again in spring 2010 to assess whether the increased use of social networking tools improves student engagement. Center for Community College Student Engagement
LaGuardia Community College LEARNING NETWORKS Sample WEB 2.0 Network Interactions and Traditional Connections Interactive, Public, Student-Driven Content Proprietary, Secure Web 2.0 Web 1.0 Blogger Home LAGCC Home Student Blogs Youtube Home LAGCC Email YouTube Student Pages Wikipedia Home Wikipedia Users Group Blackboard Facebook Home Facebook Student Pages ePortfolio Netvibes Home Netvibes Student Pages The Ning Home Ning Student Pages Shared Google Calendar
Traditional Learning Community Theme Driven Content Instructor A Instructor B Instructor C College Composition Research Paper Integrated Hour Course in Major Course in Major Student Cohort
Florida State College (FL) • Master Student Program (TA program) • Paid appointment, 20 hours week • Trained to support DevEd student • Focus on academic & social connections • 20% Web 2.0 required Center for Community College Student Engagement
Thank you for attending our session! Center for Community College Student Engagement
References • AACC [American Association of Community Colleges]. (2010). Factsheet 2010. Retrieved May 1, 2010 from http://www.aacc.nche.edu • Center for Community College Student Engagement. (2009). Making connections: Dimensions of student engagement (2009 CCSSE Findings). Austin, TX: The University of Texas at Austin, Community College Leadership Program. • Chickering, A. W., & Ehrmann, S. C. (1996, October). Implementing the seven principles: Technology as lever. AAHE Bulletin, 3-6. Retrieved November 29, 2008 from http://www.tltgroup.org/programs/seven.html • Ciez-Volz, K. (2009-2010). The Master Student Program: Learning to network, networking to learn. Jacksonville, FL: Florida State College at Jacksonville, Program Development. • Fisher, K. A. (2010). Student engagement in community college online education programs: An exploration of six constructs with implications for practice. (Doctoral dissertation, The University of Texas at Austin, May 2010). • Mix, K. K. (2010). Online social networking: Exploring the relationships between use of web-based technologies and community college student engagement. (Doctoral dissertation, The University of Texas at Austin, May 2010). • Pew. (2009). Definition of Web 2.0. Retrieved on July 1, 2009 from http://www.pewinternet.org/topics/Web-20.aspx Center for Community College Student Engagement
Karla A. Fisher, Ph.D. Kerry K. Mix, Ph.D.College Relations Coordinator Research Assistant fisher@ccsse.org mix@ccsse.org 512.232.8247 512.232.8428 • Center for Community College Student Engagement3316 Grandview St. Austin, TX 78705 • www.ccsse.orgwww.enteringstudent.org Center for Community College Student Engagement