1 / 28

Passport to Success

Passport to Success. Presentation to the Michigan Career Education Conference Martin Finney, Career Advisor Antonio Riggs, Career Advisor. Delta College. Delta College is a community college in the Great Lakes Bay Region with close to 12, 000 students attending on any given semester.

cwoods
Download Presentation

Passport to Success

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. Passport to Success Presentation to the Michigan Career Education Conference Martin Finney, Career Advisor Antonio Riggs, Career Advisor

  2. Delta College • Delta College is a community college in the Great Lakes Bay Region with close to 12, 000 students attending on any given semester. • Delta College is a member of the League of Innovation and Achieving the Dream. • The Passport to Success program was started through a Title III grant to work with at-risk students.

  3. Appreciative Advising • Focusing on the strengths and abilities and focusing on the solutions. • Based on “Positive Psychology” and “Appreciative Inquiry”

  4. The Six Phases of Appreciative Advising • Disarm • Don’t Settle • Deliver • Discover • Design • Dream • Bloom, J. L., Hutson, B. L., & He, Y. (in preparation). The appreciative advising revolution. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing.

  5. Appreciative Advising Phases • Disarm– Recognizing the importance of first impressions, create a safe, welcoming environment. • Discover - Positive open-ended questions to draw out what they enjoy doing, their strengths, and their passions. • Bloom, J. L., Hutson, B. L., & He, Y. (2008). The appreciative advising revolution. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing.

  6. Appreciative Advising Phases (continued) • Dream - Formulate a vision of what they might become, and then assist them in developing life and career goals. • Design –Devise concrete, incremental, and achievable goals • Bloom, J. L., Hutson, B. L., & He, Y. (2008). The appreciative advising revolution. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing.

  7. Appreciative Advising Phases (continued) • Deliver– The students follows through on their plans. The advisor is there for them when they stumble, believing in them every step of the way and helping them continue to update and refine their dreams as they go. • Don’t Settle – The advisor challenges the student to proactively raise the student’s internal bar of self- expectations • Bloom, J. L., Hutson, B. L., & He, Y. (2008). The appreciative advising revolution. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing.

  8. Situation • Students who were returning to school after a 3 year period and had previously fallen under Financial Aid Probation, were only succeeding (keeping their financial aid) at a 17% rate. *Delta College guidelines require Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP) in order to continue with financial aid eligibility. Students are on Financial Aid Probation if they have one or more of the following: • GPA under 2.00 • Completion rate under 67% • To many credit hours without a degree

  9. Assumptions and Initial Findings • Assumption • Students are technologically savvy • Finding • Not all students have technology skills • Even those students who understand computers, do not necessarily know where to access helps • Students may know where and how to access information, but do not read there e-mails or know what questions to ask

  10. Assumptions and Initial Findings • Assumption • Students understand the situation that they are in • Finding • Most students either do not read the information that is sent to them or do not understand it

  11. Plan: • Creation of the Passport To Success Program • After a 3 year break in enrollment, students were referred to Passport after appealing for their reinstatement of financial aid

  12. Conditions /Services: • Attending a Passport to Success Orientation is required as a condition of being approved for a financial aid award • Students are made aware of the conditions they must meet in order to continue receiving financial aid

  13. Conditions /Services: • Students are made aware of services that may assist them such as: • Career Research • Strength’s Finder Assessment • Academic Advising • Tutoring Services • Delta Closet • Food Pantry

  14. Conditions /Services: • Students are taken on a tour of campus to see key areas such as: • Registrar’s Office • Library/Tutoring Center • Counseling/Advising • Student Engagement • Career Services • E-Learning Center

  15. Conditions /Services: • Students meet with an Academic Advisor to go over scheduling/curriculum to ensure that they are enrolled in a schedule which will help them to have the best chance of success.

  16. Follow Up • After the semester begins, students are sent reminders of all of the services available to help them be successful.

  17. Conditions /Services: • By the end of the semester, students must have made satisfactory progress in all registered courses. • This requires that all grades must be of C or better. • (No grades of C-, D+, D, D-, F, or NC, no Withdrawals, and no Incompletes)

  18. Student Success

  19. Results for Winter 2011: • Out of the 53 Students who attended the Winter 2011 semester, 40 met their academic and financial aid conditions (75.5%) • Of the 13 who did not meet all the criteria, 6 passed 50% or more of their classes • Average increase in Grade Point Average is 1.2

  20. Results for Spring/Summer 2011 • Out of the 64 Students who attended the Spring/Summer 2011 semester, 51 met their academic and financial aid conditions (79.0%) • Of the 13 who did not meet all the criteria, 10 passed 50% or more of their classes and were able to attend the Fall Semester

  21. Results for Fall 2011 • Out of the 116 Students who attended the Fall 2011 semester, 83 passed all of their classes met their academic and financial aid conditions (79.0%) • Of the 33 who did not pass all of their classes, 18 passed 50% or more of their classes.

  22. Student Retention

  23. Success • Since the inception of the Passport to Success program, an average of 79% of students have passed all of their classes. • 22 students have improved their standing academically to the point where they are no longer on Financial Aid probation status.

  24. Benefits of Program: • Passport to Success provides a formal but positive way to welcome students back and actively encourage their success. • Students are informed, in person, of the expectations for continuation of financial aid.

  25. Benefits of Program: • Students do better when they are challenged and have a goal • Students will use services if the services are explained in a way that they are a benefit and not a punishment.

  26. Benefits of Program: • Delta’s Counseling/Advising and Career Services staff become familiar to the students, which makes them more likely to use the staff as resources. • Provides students with a re-orientation to the class selection and registration process as well as assistance with financial aid issues.

  27. Outcome • By sitting down with students and talking to them face to face, it helps students understand the situation they are in and the requirements that they need to meet to continue

  28. If you have any questions… • Martin Finney • Counseling/Advising & Career Services • Delta College • martinfinney@delta.edu • 989-686-9075 • Antonio Riggs • Counseling/Advising & Career Services • Delta College • antonioriggs@delta.edu • 989-686-9077

More Related