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College-Level Examination Program ® (CLEP ® )

College-Level Examination Program ® (CLEP ® ). Credit-by-Exam and PLA Creating a wave……. CLEP Overview . Credit-by-examination program serving a diverse group of students, including adults, non-traditional learners, and military service members

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College-Level Examination Program ® (CLEP ® )

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  1. College-Level Examination Program® (CLEP ®) Credit-by-Exam and PLA Creating a wave…….

  2. CLEP Overview • Credit-by-examination program serving a diverse group of students, including adults, non-traditional learners, and military service members • More than seven million exams taken since 1967 • 1,700+ colleges administer CLEP • 211,000 exams administered in 2009–10, including 76,500 administered to military service members • Exam fee = $77.00 • New website- http://clep.collegeboard.org

  3. CLEP Core Purposes CLEP allows a diverse group of students, including adult students, non-traditional learners, and military service members to: • demonstrate acquired mastery of college-level course content; • translate knowledge into college credit, commonly recognized by qualifying scores in 33 exams; and • save time and money toward college degree completion.

  4. Why Do We Want or Need Adult Learners? • Only 39% of the U.S. adult population has earned a two- or 4-year degree (SOURCE: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 2007) • There are 6.8 million adult learners involved in some form of post-secondary education (SOURCE: National Center for Education Statistics) • Our national and states’ economic recovery depend on a highly skilled and educated labor force. • Adult learners want to complete a degree and enter/re-enter workforce as expeditiously as circumstances permit.

  5. CLEP AND PLAEfficiency and Effectiveness Ways to standardize the assessment of prior learning: • PLA recognition for “course-match” models. • Nationally recognized, standardized credit by exam increases credit portability (See-ACE, CLEP, CAEL) CLEP is the most widely used, college-based credit-by-examination system in the U.S. By succeeding on a CLEP exam, individuals can earn between three and 12 college credits at 2,900 institutions.

  6. 33 CLEP Examinations Composition and Literature American Literature Analyzing and Interpreting Literature College Composition College Composition Modular English Literature Humanities History and Social Sciences American Government History of the United States I History of the United States II Human Growth and Development Introduction to Educational Psychology Principles of Macroeconomics Principles of Microeconomics Introductory Psychology Introductory Sociology Social Sciences and History Western Civilization I Western Civilization II • Science and Mathematics • Calculus • College Algebra • Precalculus • College Mathematics • Biology • Chemistry • Natural Sciences • Business • Information Systems and Computer Applications • Principles of Management • Financial Accounting • Introductory Business Law • Principles of Marketing • Foreign Languages • French Language • German Language • Spanish Language

  7. New CLEP Composition Exams College Composition College Composition Modular Effective July 1, 2010 Has your institution set credit policy for the new exams? www.collegeboard.com/clepcomposition

  8. CLEP Test Development Committees • 29 committees, each with 3 or 4 members • All committee members are college faculty who teach the relevant course • Faculty are drawn from: • All regions of the US • Four-year and two-year colleges • Public, private, and proprietary institutions • Committee members usually serve for 4 years

  9. Who Takes CLEP? Adults returning to college Military service members and veterans Students who are fluent in Spanish, French, or German Students at risk for stopping out or struggling with finances Students with high SAT or ACT scores and homeschooled Juniors or seniors who have not met lower-division requirements Transfer students International students needing to translate their overseas credit

  10. Education Level Exams Administered to National Candidates, 2009-10

  11. Age GroupExams Administered to National Candidates, 2009-10

  12. CLEP for Military and Veterans • CLEP exams are free for eligible military service members www.collegeboard.com/clepmilitary • Military veterans may seek reimbursement from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for exam and fees www.collegeboard.com/clepveterans

  13. Highest Volume CLEP ExamsExams Administered to National and Military Candidates, 2008-09 *Freshman College Composition, English Composition with and without Essay

  14. 2008 Survey of National Test Takers 45% have taken an online course 70% are working full- or part-time 45% are first-generation college students

  15. Where to test? Locations Contact Days Hours Evenings Testinghttp://professionals.collegeboard.com/testing/clep Common Questions • How to prepare to take a CLEP exam? • Registration process? • Administration fees? • Payment process? • Specific exams to take? • Re-test policy? • Score reporting? • Study materials?

  16. CLEP Test Prep for Students • CLEP prep center provides links to free online resources and textbook suggestions • CLEP Official Study Guide, covering all 33 exams • Downloadable study guides for each exam www.collegeboard.com/clepprep

  17. Considering system policy for credit-by-exam? • Seamless articulation and transfer of credit for students with qualifying exam scores; • Academic persistence and degree completion; • Recognition of prior learning for nontraditional learners, adults, and student veterans; and • Reduce transfer barriers and accumulation of excess credits.

  18. College Board Research • College Board Research specific to the CLEP® http://professionals.collegeboard.com/data-reports-research/cb/clep • To participate in an ACES validity study, available from • College Board, go to this link, http://professionals.collegeboard.com/higher-ed/validity/aces

  19. CLEP Research Findings • An Investigation of Educational Outcomes for Students Who Earn College Credit Through the College-Level Examination Program , Nancy K. Scammacca; Barbara G. Dodd; PDF 05/13/2005 • This study investigates the educational outcomes of the College-Level Examination Program (CLEP) for students who earned credit through CLEP compared to those students who earned comparable credit through the AP Program and through traditional course enrollment. Results indicate that CLEP students did as well as, or better than, those in the comparison group in nearly every case. • http://professionals.collegeboard.com/data-reports-research/cb/educational-outcomes-clep

  20. ACES Content Validity Studies

  21. The College Board College Completion Agenda • In a knowledge-based economy, critical-thinking and research-oriented skills are necessary to be successful productive employees. • The % of American adults with postsecondary credentials is not keeping pace with other industrialized nations. • To help policymakers and educators achieve the goal of 55% by 2025, The College Board Advocacy & Policy Center has developed the College Completion Agenda- • Two new resources for policymakers and educators, The College Completion Agenda 2010 Progress Report and TheCollege Completion AgendaState Policy Guide provide: • groundbreaking reports to provide the best state by state data and information to inform and shape education policy and improve college success. (Chapter 10-Adult Education)  •  a new dynamic, interactive website combines data with policy strategies, allowing information to be easily accessed and customized by each state. http://completionagenda.collegeboard.org

  22. Why is PLA important?

  23. Factors Affecting Adult Participation Affordability Accessibility Aspiration PLA can address all three

  24. Four Approaches to PLA • Standardized exams • CLEP, DSST, AP • Challenge exams • Evaluated non-college programs • Corporate training • Military training • Individualized assessments

  25. PLA at Adult-Serving Institutions • ALFI – Adult Learning-Focused Institutions • Principles for effectively serving adult learners • National benchmarking study (Pew and Lumina)

  26. ALFI Principles • Outreach • Life and Career Planning • Financing • Teaching-Learning Process • Student Support Systems

  27. ALFI Principles • Technology • Strategic Partnerships • Transitions • Assessment of Learning Outcomes

  28. The Impact of PLA at Your Institution • PLA for Recruitment • PLA for Retention • PLA for Community Impact

  29. PLA and Academic Outcomes • Increased graduation rates • Greater persistence • Shorter time to degree

  30. Graduation Rates

  31. Credit Accumulation, No Degree Earners

  32. Time to Bachelor’s Degree

  33. Time to Associate’s Degree

  34. Summary • PLA students had better graduation rates than non-PLA students • PLA students had higher rates of persistence at the same institution compared with non-PLA students • PLA students completed their degree (associate and/or bachelor’s) in less time than their non-PLA peers

  35. Kentucky Perspective • Importance of stackable and portable credits-leading to credentials in emerging fields and efficient transition and transfer pathways…. • A measure of learning outcomes associated with general education • Support for Kentucky Adult Learning Initiative

  36. KY Effective Strategies- Now and Moving forward • The changing nature and role of higher education in response to the current economic environment… • Faculty led TUNING process in Kentucky • aligning learning outcomes with CLEP exam content • engaging stakeholders = employers & students • GOAL: Seamless articulation to reduce transfer barriers and support persistence completion

  37. KY Effective Strategies- Now and Moving forward • Identifying & leveraging resources to support consistent credit-by-exam policies • Legislative action (HB160) • Collaboration with workforce community • Grant funding • Marketing strategies K • Kentucky Adult Learner Initiative (KALI) • TransferKentucky portal

  38. Connecting Students to CLEP In Your State and on Your Campus

  39. Closing Remarks Q & A Thank you!

  40. Contacts Pamela Kerouac, Ed.D. ,Senior Assessment Manager, College Board pkerouac@collegeboard.org CLEP Email: clep@collegeboard.org Adina O'Hara, Ph.D., Senior Associate for Academic Affairs KY Council on Postsecondary Education Frankfort KY 40601 adina.ohara@ky.gov Cathy Brigham, Ph.D. , CAEL cbrigham@cael.org

  41. The value of open ended questions……..

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