1 / 31

The College of St. Scholastica :

2013 CAEL Conference. The College of St. Scholastica :. Weaving Threads of Innovation into the Tapestry of Tradition: One College’s Story. The College of st. scholastica. Workshop Presenters : Rick Butte Teresa Ipina Lesley Kleveter Cindy Olson. Over 100 years of learning!.

collin
Download Presentation

The College of St. Scholastica :

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2013 CAEL Conference The College of St. Scholastica: Weaving Threads of Innovation into the Tapestry of Tradition: One College’s Story

  2. The College of st. scholastica • Workshop Presenters: • Rick Butte • Teresa Ipina • Lesley Kleveter • Cindy Olson

  3. Over 100 years of learning!

  4. Our benedictine values • Community: Sharing responsibility to create and support community • Hospitality: Create a welcoming atmosphere personally and institutionally • Respect: Cherishing and promoting the worth of all human life • Stewardship: Utilizing human resources responsibly • Love of Learning: Preserving the intellectual and material heritage entrusted to us by past generations

  5. Direction of Presentation Agenda – Non-Traditional Students • Recruitment • Retention • CSS Complete Initiative • Updated PLA Process • Conclusion – Take-Aways

  6. Recruitment Recruitment Process Inquiries Web Driven Marketing Driven B2B & other direct selling Other

  7. Recruitment • Key Elements of Recruitment Process • Help potential student reveal core goals for earning degree. • Serve as initial advisor to demonstrate pathway to achieving core goals through degree completion. • Seamless transition to advisor once the student is admitted through a well documented recruiting summary.

  8. Recruitment • Help potential student reveal core goals for earning a degree This step is a discovery process where the goal of the “Recruiter” is to develop a partnering relationship with the potential student in order to identify their previous academic work, the motivation for seeking a degree as well as any concerns or barriers that may imped successful degree completion. This can be accomplished using a base set of question: • Why is earning a degree important to you? • Who else will be impacted by this decision and available to support you? • What things stand in your way to achieving your goal? • When would you like to start, finish? • Where do you see yourself heading after you complete your degree?

  9. Recruitment EXAMPLE: • Recruiter… Why is earning a degree important to you? Student… So I can advance my position with my employer. The questions should not stop here, Recruiter follows up with…What new opportunities do you see happening when you advance with your employer? Student… I will get a raise that will allow me to better care for my family. • This answer brings the emotional connection to the discussion and more than likely reveals the student’s true reason for seeking the degreeand a key motivator.

  10. Recruitment • Recruiter serves as initial advisor to demonstrate the academic pathway to achieving core goal through degree completion. • Describe how any transfer credits may be used towards degree. • Describe the variety of course offerings and modalities that are available. • Describe the different ways to obtain credits towards course/degree completion. • Ask the question, can you see yourself at graduation? With any other answer than yes…

  11. Recruitment With any other answer than yes… Continued: The Recruiter will need to probe more deeply to identify remaining barriers and concerns, while at the same time be able to recognize a mismatch between CSS and the potential student. And when a mismatch occurs, serve as a resource by offering different ideas to help the student reach their goals.

  12. Recruitment • Provideseamless transition to advisor once student is admitted through a well documented recruiting summary. • Recruiter’s summary becomes part of student file so that the advisor can review the file and know the student before making contact. Advisor’s role • Review recruiter’s summary to understand student history, prime motivators and barriers.

  13. Recruitment Advisor’s role continued: • Contact student to formalize the transition to the advisor. • Set a date for near-term advising appointment (virtually or in person) • Maintain ongoing partnering relationship with student until graduation.

  14. Retention • Top 20 Reasons for Dropping Out • (Report by Classes and Careers, 2012)

  15. Retention • Theme 1: Campus-wide Communication of Retention Goals and Rationale • Invite dialog between Institutional Reporting and Advisors/Departments • Identify areas where data collection and reporting can be strengthened • Establish core retention team comprised of cross-functional representation (including students and faculty too!)

  16. Retention • Theme 2: Enhance Student Support • Develop financial literacy training that can be delivered online • Modify New Student Orientation program to incorporate a student on-boarding portal • Build Peer Networks

  17. Retention • Theme 3: Enhance Academic Advisement and Tracking • Engage in Intrusive Advising Techniques • Partner with IT Department to analyze characteristics of students with high persistence and graduation rates • Develop dashboard analytics

  18. Retention

  19. Retention • Theme 4: Enhance Student Experience Inside the Classroom • Increase active experiential learning opportunities • Provide early and frequent feedback for students • Host Fall Adjunct Faculty Kick-off and two professional development events per academic year

  20. Retention • Retention Take Aways • Assess current reality • Determine largest barriers and address those first • Tailor action items to specifically address barriers • CELEBRATE successes! • Continue to assess and adapt

  21. CSS Complete Initiative What is CSS Complete? • Affordable degree completion pathways • Assessment options available for prior and new learning • Up front mapping of prior learning as it relates to the program of study • Completion Coach

  22. CSS complete initiative Role of the Completion Coach • Discuss previous education, work and other experience, and long term personal and career goals • Explore degree completion options with a student • Map it all to a degree completion plan and outline next steps

  23. CSS Complete Initiative Credit for Prior Learning • Direct transfer • Certifications • Military Training and Experience • Standardized Assessment (AP, CLEP, DSST) • Institutional Challenge Exam • Prior Learning Portfolio Credit for New Learning • Post secondary courses – at CSS or another institution • Assessment of new learning gained through self-study (MOOCs, open online content)

  24. CSS Complete Initiative Degree Completion Example

  25. CSS Complete Initiative Degree Completion Example

  26. Updated PLA PORTFOLIO Process Overview of Old Process • Offered since 1981 • PLA Workshop New Process • Reasons for Change • Blackboard - Courses

  27. Updated PLA Portfolio Process PLA Orientation – 1st8-week Term • Guide/Coach • Assignments • Accomplishment • Segments for Portfolio: • Educational Plan – complete within 2 weeks • Autobiography – complete within 2 weeks • Factual Narrative – practice one Learning Outcome • Documentation – prepare in 2nd 8-week term

  28. Updated PLA Portfolio Process Educational Plan: Example of how student with seasoned and substantial workforce experience was able to package her learning into an Educational Plan: • Student states her educational goal and why it is a goal • Student clarifies what the advantage is of that goal • Student then explains the anticipated result of her educational goal

  29. Updated PLA Portfolio Process PLA Faculty Review – 2nd8-week Term • Students register for PLA Portfolio Course • Pay prior to term start – can withdraw during 1st week of term • Faculty evaluator works with student • ‘P’ or “NP’ at end of term

  30. Conclusion – Take-Aways • Focus: Flexibility for student • Transparency: Recruitment through graduation • Communication is key! • Review current processes for transfer credits and update as necessary to best assist student • Advisor role crucial • Adapt to meet student needs • Student-centric Questions?

  31. Thank you • Rick Butte rbutte@css.edu • Teresa Ipinatipinia@css.edu • Lesley Kleveterlklevete@css.edu • Cindy Olson colson2@css.edu

More Related