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American Chemical Society. Lessons. Leverage the investments to establish the approval program with resources to maintain and grow it.Focus continuously on increasing participation.Articulate and demonstrate the benefits, to both the participating programs and the beneficiaries.Consider the lands
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1. American Chemical Society How Pursuit of a Goal Became a Digression: Lessons from the ACS Chemical Technology Program Approval Service Jodi Wesemann
Assistant Director for Higher Education
American Chemical Society
BIO Community College Program Day
May 2, 2010
2. American Chemical Society Lessons Leverage the investments to establish the approval program with resources to maintain and grow it.
Focus continuously on increasing participation.
Articulate and demonstrate the benefits, to both the participating programs and the beneficiaries.
Consider the landscape carefully.
3. American Chemical Society Landscape Existing approval program for bachelors degree programs
Fosters high-quality education
Prepares students for the workforce and graduate school
Benefits all students taking chemistry
Increasing interest in supporting two-year colleges
Improve student transfer
Attract diverse range of students
Increasing awareness of chemistry-based technology programs
Offer degrees
Have fairly uniform curriculum
Use skill standards
4. American Chemical Society Timeline 1991 Chemical Technology Program Approval Service established
1993 Voluntary Industry Standards developed
2000 NSF-ATE grant received
2000 Skill standards updated and put on-line with gap analysis tool
2004 NSF-ATE supplement received
2004 Critical Issues and Effective Practices Conference held and survey conducted
2006 Skill standards expanded
2007 Chemical Technology Program Approval Service reviewed
2009 Program review process updated
2009 Chemical Technology Program Approval Service ended
5. American Chemical Society Criteria for Approval Partnership with local/regional industry, academia, workforce organizations, and community
Clear mission and goals
Adequate equipment, students, and support
Work opportunities for students and graduates
Growth opportunities for faculty
Strong assessment tools
6. American Chemical Society Benefits of ACS Approval Approved chemistry-based technology programs:
Improved industrial workforce development
Developed process of continuous improvement
Enhanced their credibility with financial sources, academic community, and students
Obtained national promotion
Became part of an instant network of chemistry-based technology programs
Coordinated efforts on specific topics
In a 2008 survey, 100% of approved program coordinators
Planned on maintaining approval
Recommended ACS approval for qualified programs
7. American Chemical Society Benefits of ACS Approval ACS:
Was considered responsive to two-year college and industry needs
Increased involvement of volunteers
Developed relationships with coordinators of programs
In a 2007 program review, concerns were raised
Low number of approved programs
In 2009, the ACS Board of Directors reallocated funds
Terminated support for chemical technician education
Increased support for two-year college chemistry education
8. American Chemical Society Assessment Aspects that worked:
Self-evaluation process combined with 3rd party evaluation
Criteria that accommodated differences across industry
Simultaneous development of skill standards and customizable platform
Publication of directory of chemistry-based technology programs
Compilation and dissemination of effective practices
Areas for improvement:
Time commitment required to apply for approval and renewal
Promotion of ACS approval
Interest of industry
Level of sustained commitment
9. American Chemical Society Lessons Leverage the investments to establish the approval program with resources to maintain and grow it.
Focus continuously on increasing participation.
Articulate and demonstrate the benefits, to both the participating programs and the beneficiaries.
Consider the landscape carefully. Leverage the investments to establish the approval program with resources to maintain and grow it.
Dont allow other areas of development to divert resources.
Focus continuously on increasing participation.
Without significant buy-in from the community at large and all the stakeholders, the program will be hard to sustain.
Articulate and demonstrate the benefits, to both the participating programs and the beneficiaries.
Make the impact of the program clear.
Highlight that the goal is quality, not quantity.
Consider the landscape carefully.
In a culture that celebrates innovation, sustaining an approval program is difficult.
Local relationships can be more influential than national programs.Leverage the investments to establish the approval program with resources to maintain and grow it.
Dont allow other areas of development to divert resources.
Focus continuously on increasing participation.
Without significant buy-in from the community at large and all the stakeholders, the program will be hard to sustain.
Articulate and demonstrate the benefits, to both the participating programs and the beneficiaries.
Make the impact of the program clear.
Highlight that the goal is quality, not quantity.
Consider the landscape carefully.
In a culture that celebrates innovation, sustaining an approval program is difficult.
Local relationships can be more influential than national programs.
10. American Chemical Society Acknowledgements Jack T. Ballinger
Roger Bartholomew
Nathan Beach
Jan Berntson
John Clevenger
Richard Cobb
Edward Fisher
Donna Friedman
Onofrio Gaglione
Harry G. Hajian
Gary Hicks
Kirk Hunter
Glenn Johnson
11. American Chemical Society Acknowledgements Brazosport College (Lake Jackson, TX)
Community College of Rhode Island (Warwick, RI)
County College of Morris (Randolph, NJ)
Delaware Technical and Community College (Newark, DE)
Delta College (University Center, MI)
Ferris State University (Big Rapids, MI)
Ivy Tech Community College (Lafayette, IN)
Lansing Community College (Lansing, MI)