1 / 49

Community Catalyst, Economic & Knowledge Power Source

Community Catalyst, Economic & Knowledge Power Source. Presentation to UW System Board of Regents Richard Wells, Chancellor Lane Earns, Provost February 7, 2013. Rubric: Creative thinking Closing a “higher-order , cognitive/soft skills gap”. Rubric: Teamwork, problem solving

walter
Download Presentation

Community Catalyst, Economic & Knowledge Power Source

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. Community Catalyst, Economic & Knowledge Power Source

  2. Presentation to UW System Board of Regents Richard Wells, Chancellor Lane Earns, Provost February 7, 2013

  3. Rubric: Creative thinking Closing a “higher-order, cognitive/soft skills gap”

  4. Rubric: Teamwork, problem solving Closing a “higher-order, Cognitive/soft skills gap”

  5. Our successes

  6. 10 Successful Strategic Outcomes • Drove larger enrollments, increased # students of color and adult students, degrees conferred and retention rates. • Secured more grants, more private dollars than ever before, including completion of comprehensive capital campaign supporting academic programs and student scholarships. • Added new online, accelerated and collaborative degree programs, baccalaureate degree completion programs and three new, workforce-responsive engineering technology majors. • Raised level of academic preparedness of our 1st yearstudents, continue to increase number, diversity of high-impact degree programs. • Added tenure-track positions, expanded support programs.

  7. 10 Successful Strategic Outcomes • Enhanced facilities: $316 million in construction projects from 2000 through 2015 completed or in development, fueled by: • $160 million in state investment. • $111 million in program revenue (from residence hall fee to business service fee revenues). • More than $45 million in donor, University-private sector partnership investment. • Earned national recognition for our commitment to “green” principles.

  8. 10 Successful Strategic Outcomes • Recognized as a national model for developing, exemplary campus-wide liberal education programs; redesigning a groundbreaking, high-impact, high-quality general education experience. • Established emerging, national reputation for the way we engage, partner with individuals, organizations to better serve our region. • Supported faculty, students in amazing achievements. (See pages 2 through 7 of Annual Report for specific results).

  9. Big challenges remain, big changesrequired…

  10. Strategies “Macro” Vs. “Micro”

  11. Macro Challenges • Improving student success, closing achievement gaps. • Affordability of college. • Competitive compensation, support for, development of faculty, staff.

  12. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps

  13. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps

  14. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps

  15. Challenges: Achievement gaps

  16. Challenges: Achievement gaps *Expected Family Contribution (EFC) determines the range of Pell award amounts. The application is called the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

  17. Challenges: Achievement gaps

  18. Challenges: Achievement gaps

  19. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps – Pell summary • From 2007 cohort to 2011 cohort, more students applied for Pell grants (+28.8 percent). • Average award amount increased (+34.6 percent) while total awards granted increased dramatically (+63.3 percent). • The number of Pell students who had “zero” ability for family to contribute toward the cost of their educations skyrocketed (+104 percent).

  20. Challenges: Achievement gaps

  21. Challenges: Achievement gaps

  22. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps summary • Degrees awarded have increased significantly, outpacing large enrollment increases (see Table 1). • Total 6-year graduation/still-enrolled rates for first-year, full-time and transfer students have increased wherein the transfer student rate of improvement more than doubled compared to the first-time, full-time student improvement rate (+4.8 percent vs. +10.5 percent) (see Tables 2 and 3). • The fall 2007 cohort retention rate compared to the fall 2011 cohort rate slightly declined with no change for white students; however, there was a very large rate of decline for students of color (see Table 4).

  23. Challenge: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps summary (cont). • The fall 2007 cohort white student retention rate was slightly lower (-1.9 percent) than students of color while the fall 2011 cohort rate for students of color was much higher (-17.8 percent) (see Table 4). • The percentage of non-Pell-eligible students decreased significantly from the fall 2007 cohort to the fall 2011 cohort. However, the non-Pell-eligible rate of decrease for students of color was much higher (see Table 5). • Comparing the 2007 cohort to the 2011 cohort, Pell-eligible white students increased and then their rates of retention decreased. Pell-eligible students of color also increased; however, their rate of retention decreased more than four times the white Pell students’ rate(see Table 5). • Both non-Pell white students and students of color retention rates improved (see Table 6).

  24. Macro Strategy: Improving student success, closing achievement gaps University Studies Program: Transforming general education

  25. What makes this general education program distinctive such that educational quality and success for all students improves and achievement gaps close?

  26. USP Distinctiveness • Curriculum-based on campus Essential Learning Outcomes • Signature Questions threaded throughout the program • Common intellectual experiences tailored for first-year students • Learning communities • Peer mentors • Community engagement projects • Alumni mentors • Electronic learning portfolios • Specific alternatives for transfer students from other institutions • On-going professional development for the teaching community • Integrated assessment of student learning

  27. Macro Challenges • Improving student success, closing achievement gaps. • Affordability of college. • Competitive compensation, support for, development of faculty, staff.

  28. Challenges: Affordability

  29. Macro Strategy: Affordability of college Developing a ‘Stakeholders Scorecard’

  30. Macro Challenges • Improving student success, closing achievement gaps. • Affordability of college. • Competitive compensation, support for, development of faculty, staff.

  31. Journal Sentinel, PolitiFact Wisconsin, Dec. 26

  32. Gannett Wisconsin Media, Jan. 4

  33. Macro Strategy: Increase compensation funding priority and decentralize pay plan authority • Increase external stakeholder funding for compensation, professional development support. • Increase internal stakeholder reallocation funding priority for compensation, professional development support. • Decentralize pay plan authority, accountability to Board of Regents, UW institutions.

More Related