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From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January 27, 2010 Pre-Conference Workshop Cathy Buyarski, Ph.D. Assistant Dean, University College Gayle A. Williams, Ed.D., Assistant Dean, University College

From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

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Page 1: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

From Recruitment to Retention:

Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success

National Institute for the Study of Transfer StudentsJanuary 27, 2010

Pre-Conference Workshop

Cathy Buyarski, Ph.D. Assistant Dean, University College Gayle A. Williams, Ed.D., Assistant Dean, University College

Page 2: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Overview of Session Context and Culture of IUPUI Council on Retention and Graduation Transfer Student Task Force Areas of Focus Data Analysis Moving Forward

We will stop after each section and provide time for you to reflect and answer questions about your campus environment and students

Page 3: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

A Place to Begin

Define “transfer student”

Page 4: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

About IUPUI Founded 1969

Urban commuter campus

180+ degrees offered

Just over 20,000 undergraduate students

28,700 total students Includes professional schools: medicine, dentistry,

law

Page 5: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Retention and Graduation at IUPUI First to Second Year Retention

2004 – 05 was 67% 2008-09 was 74%

Six Year Graduation Rates 2004 was 22.3% 2008 was 32.6%

Making progress but… Students in the official cohort are small percentage of our students We’ve focused almost solely on the cohort Seniors, sophomores, students of color, transfers

Page 6: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Council on Retention and Graduation Established by the provost in 2004 as one of the major

campus councils

Representation from all academic schools and major service units

Charge: Provide the campus-wide leadership and coordination necessary (1) to attain a first to second year retention rate of at least 75% for all full-time students entering in fall 2008; (2) to attain a six-year graduation rate of 40% for full-time students entering in fall 2004; and (3) to award at least 4,000 baccalaureate degrees in 2010.

Page 7: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Transfer Student Task Force Subcommittee of the Council on Retention and

Graduation Every school volunteered to participate! Goals

Establish campus definitions of transfer status Collect data to better understand the success rates of transfer

students Evaluate current condition of the transfer experience Make recommendations for serving transfer students more

effectively

Page 8: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Areas of Focus

Defining Transfer Students Recruiting and Entry Services Existing Services Advising and Academic Policies/Procedures Transfer Center and Services Data and Research

Page 9: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Who are our Transfer students?Categories

“True” Transfers: students who transfer to IUPUI with the intention of earning a degree

“Swirling” Transfers: students who move between enrollment at IUPUI and other institutions; some are co-enrolled in two or more institutions

“Masquerading” Transfers: students who intend to transfer to IUPUI but for a variety of reasons enter as visiting students

Page 10: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Who are our transfer students?

IUPUI Definitions

External transfers from outside the IU system: students who transfer with 12 or more credits from another institution

Intercampus transfers: students who transfer from another IU system school with 12 or more credits

Returning students: Students who previously attended IUPUI and return to the campus after having enrolled at another institution

Page 11: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Recruiting and Entry Services Considerations

Advising is a large part of transfer recruitment Increasing the numbers of transfers will increase our

graduation rate Transfers tend to seek advice from academic

departments/schools prior to initiating admission International students are a large part of our transfer population There are ethical/professional considerations in recruiting

transfers from other institutions

Page 12: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Discussion Points When is the “best” time for transfers to enter the institution? After a

certain number of credit hours or semesters? What is the relationship between departments and Admissions in the

process? How do we include non-traditional students in our recruiting efforts? Can we identify and then recruit the transfer students most likely to

graduate? How do we make campus visits and admissions process transfer

friendly? How can we information on being successful at IUPUI during

transfer orientation (e.g., getting involved)?

Page 13: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Existing Services Offices currently providing services to transfer students:

Undergraduate Admissions and Campus Visits Student Financial Aid Services and Student Scholarships Multicultural Outreach Orientation Ivy Tech – IUPUI Coordinated Programs University College Honors Program Academic Units Registrar

Level of understanding of and service to transfer students varies

Page 14: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Advising and Academic Policies Primary Focus

Credit evaluation at point of admission Advising for first term at IUPUI

Concerns Needs of transfer students Time and attention required (workload)

Other Considerations Advising models at feeder institutions Pre-reqs based on standing or credit hour completion Advising beyond articulation

Page 15: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Transfer Center and Services

Campus structures are different; but economic challenges are common to all

IUPUI’s response: a gear set model for transfer students

How will it work? Plans for the first year of operation revolve

around data intake

Page 16: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Assessment Collection Model

Needs Assessment

Process Assessment

Outcomes Assessment

Page 17: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Start with Baseline Data

What do you have?

What do you need?

Where will you get it?

Page 18: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Limits of Institutional Data Dig deep into the data for critical information

Determine the characteristics of transfers Commuter vs residential 2 year vs 4 year Freshman vs juniors

Are there differences in the success rate for each group on your campus?

Where should you put your greatest efforts?

Page 19: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Initial Data Set from IUPUI

Transfer success by major, gender, ethnicity Credit hour enrollment by school Enrollment patterns Success rates by feeder institution

Page 20: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Other Possible Data Sets

NSSE and other national instruments

Entering student surveys

Other campus-wide student surveys

IUPUI Pulse survey (http://survey.iupui.edu/pulse/)

Page 21: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Your Campus Plan Look over your responses and thoughts to the

action plan questions

Determine three action steps you can take this semester to enhance your campus efforts to enhance transfer student success

Page 22: From Recruitment to Retention: Focusing Campus Efforts to Promote Transfer Student Success National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students January

Contact Information

Cathy Buyarski

[email protected]

278-4722

Gayle Williams

[email protected]

274-4118