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Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012

Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

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Page 1: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Students Speak! Are We Listening?

NISOD2012

Page 2: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

89%

…of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they believe they have the motivation to do what it takes to succeed in college.

Page 3: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

I

College, here I come!

Page 4: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

I Have a Goal!

On the SENSE survey, traditional-age entering students say…

78% want to obtain an associate degree.

79% want to transfer to a four-year institution.

61% want to complete a certificate program.

Page 5: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Where am I heading?

Page 6: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

I

Next step – college!

Page 7: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Am I Ready for College?

Page 8: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

86%

…of traditional-age entering students responding to the SENSE survey say they’re academically prepared for college.

Page 9: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

I think I’m ready…

Page 10: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

71% of traditional-age entering students

responding to the SENSE survey learned that they are not ready for college-level courses that require skills in reading, writing and/or math.

Page 11: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they
Page 12: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

New students 18-24 years of age…

• More attend full-time• Work fewer hours than older

students• Have fewer family responsibilitiesYet… they spend less time preparing

for class.

Page 13: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

During the first 3 weeks of community college, students 18-24 years old …

• 46% came to class unprepared at least once.

• 28% skipped class at least once.• 29% did not turn in an assignment

at least once.

Page 14: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they
Page 15: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

48% drop out before the beginning of their second year.

Page 16: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

David Conley, Distinguished Professor, University of Oregon:

“Nobody manages the transition very well.  For most institutions of higher education, it isn't a transition at all.  The student just shows up…there is very little process or systematic thought for what is going on for the student in terms of all the dimensions that are required to make that transition.” 

Page 17: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

SENSE Benchmarks for Effective Educational Practice

• Early Connections• High Expectations & Aspirations• Clear Academic Plan & Pathway• Effective Track to College

Readiness• Engaged Learning• Academic & Social Support Network

Page 18: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Welcome to college!

Page 19: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

We wear them down…

Page 20: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Students don’t know what they don’t know…

but we think they should…and behave as though they do!

Page 21: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What entering community college students are telling us:

• Fewer than half participated in on-campus orientation.

• 11% in online orientation

SENSE 2011 Cohort Data

Page 22: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Students need orientation...

Page 23: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

48% …of younger entering community college

students say they never saw an advisor during their first three weeks.

37% for non-traditional-aged students

SENSE 2011 Cohort Data

Page 24: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Younger students are less likely to…

Use academic advising and planningThey ask their friends what to do…

53% vs. 42% for older students

SENSE 2011 Cohort Data

Page 25: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

I have an advisor…

Page 26: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What 18-24 year old new community college students are telling us:

• 28% enrolled in a class designed to teach them the skills needed to succeed in college.

Page 27: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Creating an on-ramp to college…

Page 28: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What makes a class a good class?

Page 29: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Is this learning?

Page 30: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

This is learning!

Page 31: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Younger community college students are less likely to….

…say they are getting prompt feedback from instructors about their progress – they’re looking for GRADES!

Page 32: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What’s my GRADE?

Page 33: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Younger community college students are less likely to…

• Go to a tutor• Go to math, English and computer labs• Ask an instructor for help• Discuss an assignment or grade with an

instructor

Page 34: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

In college, I need help, but…

Page 35: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Students don’t do optional!!

Page 36: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What questions does the information raise for you?

What is one thing you and the college can do to address these findings?

Page 37: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Houston Community College Student Success Class

Fall to spring persistence increased for all groups except Asian students, which remained constant at 78%. Largest gain has been for African American students – from 69% to 75%.

Community College Survey of Student Engagement

Page 38: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

82%

76%

74%

70% 75% 80% 85%

C-E Dev LC

Dev LC

Stand Alone

Skagit Valley College Pilot Fall-Winter Persistence

Page 39: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Zane State Mandatory testing & placement, mandatory orientation, mandatory FYE course, mandatory advising for at-risk students

3-year mandatory FYE course associated with 10% increase in fall-to-fall persistence.

3-year graduation rate for developmental students now exceeds 50%.

Survey of Student Engagement

Page 40: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What Matters Most for Student Success?

Page 41: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Some Observations about Entering Students

• Students experience culture shock and academic shock.

• Students don’t know what they don’t know…but we expect them to!

• You have to ask to be told…but what if you don’t know what to ask?

Page 42: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

What does this mean for community college leaders?

• Create an “on-ramp” to college life.• Show students the relevance of what they’re

doing – help them understand the “what” and the “why.”

• Make everything more personal – show them we care!

• If we know what students need – make it mandatory!

Page 43: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

High Performing Colleges

…make student engagement

inescapable!

Imagine Success!

Page 44: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Inescapable…

Page 45: Students Speak! Are We Listening? NISOD 2012. 89% …of traditional-age entering students responding to the Survey of Entering Student Engagement say they

Arleen Arnsparger,

Project Manager

Initiative on Student Success

Center for Community

College Student Engagement (CCCSE)