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Concurrent Enrollment as a Vehicle for Recruitment & Retention: Does Tinto’s Model Apply to CE?

Concurrent Enrollment as a Vehicle for Recruitment & Retention: Does Tinto’s Model Apply to CE?. USU Concurrent Enrollment Program VINCENT J. LAFFERTY MS, Executive Director DANIEL R. JUDD PhD, Assessment Specialist HEATHER THOMAS MS, Director. CEPs are being asked to Quantify their

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Concurrent Enrollment as a Vehicle for Recruitment & Retention: Does Tinto’s Model Apply to CE?

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  1. Concurrent Enrollment as a Vehicle for Recruitment & Retention: Does Tinto’s Model Apply to CE? USU Concurrent Enrollment Program VINCENT J. LAFFERTY MS, Executive Director DANIEL R. JUDD PhD, Assessment Specialist HEATHER THOMAS MS, Director

  2. CEPs are being asked to Quantify their Contribution to the Sponsoring Institution

  3. Student-Centered Measures

  4. It is less costly to keep an existing customer than to attract a new one

  5. Tinto - 1993 Generally, the more satisfying those (college) experiences are felt to be, the more likely are individuals to persist until degree completion.

  6. Tinto’s Model of Integration Degree Completion Integration Student Satisfaction Pascarella & Terenzini, 1991

  7. Apply Tinto’s Model to CE? • HS Students & Parents • Teachers, Counselors & Administrators • NACEP’s 1 Year & 5 Year for Accreditation

  8. Conditions Supportive of Retention • Expectation = Parents • Advice = HS Counselors • Support = HS Teachers • Involvement = CE Credits • Learning =Satisfaction

  9. Overview USU CE Program Legislated State funding in 1991 2006-07 had 6,774 students Class titles for CE credit = 118 HSs in Utah and Idaho = 75

  10. Study #1 CEP Stakeholders: HS Students & Parents

  11. CE Student Study • Three HS located nearby • Census of 64 CE classes • CE ≈ 50% HS Students • N = 1,000 HS Students

  12. Results HS Students Overall student satisfaction with the CE program was 93% Of the decided Seniors, 93% said that they would attend USU

  13. Parents of CE Students Random sample of 436 households Mail with telephone follow-up n = 253 completed questionnaires 58% response rate.

  14. Results Parent Study 87% of Parents agreed satisfied with the education student received through CE, 47% strongly agreed. 90% of Parents agreed that they recommend CE to other parents, 62% strongly agreed.

  15. What is MOST IMPORTANT to Students and Parents in choosing an Undergraduate Program?

  16. Factors Important in Choosing a College Social opportunities Education for a better job Faculty show concern for students Quality program for chosen career Affordable tuition Availability of scholarships Dan Jones & Assoc. ’02 Focus Groups

  17. Ranking of Decision FactorsIdentical Results

  18. Study #2 Focus Groups: CE Teachers and HS Counselors

  19. Focus Group Results • HS Counselors are the Gatekeepers • Policy & Procedure to ADMIT-DROP • Notify HS of Students on Probation • Strategies for Students NOT in CE

  20. Counselors’ Dilemma How to advise students as they take AP classes, CE classes, and the ACT/SAT so that all credit sources work together to give students maximum credits, but not so many that some have to be counted as electives.

  21. Study #3 NACEP Accreditation 5 Year & 1 Year Surveys

  22. How Many Credits Earned?1-Yr. Follow-up Study (2006-07): • 3,447 credits earned (n=200) • Average was 17 credits • Median was 12 credits • Mode was 6 credits

  23. Attended College After HS 18% of CE students in 1-yr were going or were on LDS mission

  24. Attended Sponsor After HS SLCC, BYU, & SUU increased enrollment of USU CEP students

  25. Recommendation Use the NACEP Accreditation Surveys to Quantify Your CE Program’s Contribution to Your Sponsoring Institution.

  26. Quantifying Contributions • What does the Sponsor give? • Avg. Credits Earned X % CE Student at Sponsor • What does the Sponsor get back? • Number of Freshman or New Admits • Avg. Semesters CE Students Retained • Tuition Dollars Earned • Public Support – Satisfaction • Benefit of CE to Disadvantaged Students? • Low-income • First-Generation College

  27. Comparison Current Status

  28. Comparison of SatisfactionOverall satisfaction (combined “Excellent” and “Good”) remained at 95%

  29. Comparison Credit/Satisfaction2006-07 1-Yr. Follow-up Study:

  30. Does greater involvement in CEincrease the likelihoodthat students will attend Sponsor Institution?

  31. Credit by Where Enrolled2006-07 1-Yr. Follow-up Study:

  32. Summary #3 Results 55% of USU CEP students attended Sponsor 5 years after HS > 3,000 students Both surveys had Excellent ratings > 60% Both surveys had overall satisfaction > 90% Average CE credits earned was 14 - 17 As credits earned increased so did overall satisfaction and likelihood of attending Sponsor

  33. Overall Findings Student & Parent expectations same Emphasis on career goals HS Counselors are CE gatekeepers Majority of CE students go to Sponsor Students earning more CE credits More satisfied Attend Sponsor in greater numbers

  34. Recommendations for Retention Support Student Satisfaction • Continue strengthening class quality • Offer career-oriented courses • Network ongoingly with counselors • Perform annual satisfaction studies • Benchmark student satisfaction results

  35. Recommendations for Retention • Apply for and stay current on NACEP Accreditation Status • Use the NACEP Accreditation Surveys to quantify the contribution of CE to your sponsoring institutions • Confirm retention figures and contribution of CEPs by creating a NACEP database

  36. It is less costly to keep an enrolled student than to attract a new one

  37. Thank You

  38. Dan Judd, PhD, MPA dan.judd@usu.edu c 435-770-0139

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