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SUPPORT FOR YOUR  STUDENT EQUITY PLAN

SUPPORT FOR YOUR  STUDENT EQUITY PLAN. Presented by the Institute for Evidence-Based Change September 5, 2014. Presenters. Richard Duran President of Oxnard College. Jordan Horowitz Vice President IEBC. Brad Phillips President IEBC. Engaging in the Student Equity Plan.

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SUPPORT FOR YOUR  STUDENT EQUITY PLAN

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  1. SUPPORT FOR YOUR STUDENT EQUITY PLAN Presented by the Institute for Evidence-Based Change September 5, 2014

  2. Presenters Richard Duran President of Oxnard College Jordan Horowitz Vice President IEBC Brad Phillips President IEBC

  3. Engaging in the Student Equity Plan • Welcome to the webinar! • The changing face of California • The importance of this work • Colleges need to welcome and embrace this opportunity • This is not a “check the box” plan • Develop an authentic, doable plan

  4. Data Use and Your Student Equity Plan

  5. Some Overarching Considerations • How much data is really actionable?

  6. Typical Student Tracking Outcomes

  7. Some Overarching Considerations • How much data is really actionable? • Don’t forget about the overall numbers

  8. Transfer Rate by Age Group

  9. Transfer Rate by Age Group

  10. Some Overarching Considerations • How much data is really actionable? • Don’t forget about the overall numbers • If your reports indicate that a majority of your students are underperforming—that all or most of your percentages are low, then it’s your systems and not the students

  11. Systems Student

  12. Some Overarching Considerations • How much data is really actionable? • Don’t forget about the overall numbers • If your reports indicate that a majority of your students are underperforming—that all or most of your percentages are low, then it’s your systems and not the students • Identify your key themes

  13. Remediation Preparation Persistence Special Populations Student Services Instruction

  14. Some Overarching Considerations • How much data is really actionable? • Don’t forget about the overall numbers • If your reports indicate that a majority of your students are underperforming—that all or most of your percentages are low, then it’s your systems and not the students • Identify your key themes • It’s not just about programs, don’t forget about policies

  15. Studentstatus Programs Policies

  16. Innovations • Impact of culture and habit on organizational change • Setting criteria for innovations • Reviewing current efforts • High impact policy and practice innovations • Using project management to support implementation • Monitoring and evaluate the effectiveness of innovations

  17. The Landscape • What is your College already doing to address gaps in student equity? • What populations are being served? • What evidence exists to support the efficacy of the practices? • Of these, what can be scaled, modified or eliminated? • What new initiatives can be employed that have a research basis for improvement?

  18. Considerations and Criteria • No BOUTIQUE practices • No small grants for innovation • Think big, start small • Not about restoring what was lost in the cuts • Must be able to go to scale • Must be researched-based • Must be able to implemented properly • Must be adequately resourced • Think systemically • Modest gains can be made with student services alone, Large gains can be made with instructional interventions and student services combined

  19. Policies/Practices • Barrier removal • Eliminate late registration • First time in college strategies • Authentic orientation • Align HS and college coursework • Supplemental instruction • Summer boot camp • Purposeful mentoring • Focus on retention strategies • Learning communities at scale • Structured Academic Pathways

  20. Use Project Management to Ensure Effective Roll Out of the High Impact Practice

  21. Effective innovations + Effective implementation Increased Student Success!

  22. Project Management Plan • RASIC • Responsible • Accountable • Support • Inform • Consult

  23. Monitor and Evaluate the Effectiveness of the Policy/Practice

  24. Era of Accountability • What gets measured gets done • If you don’t measure results, you can’t tell success from failure • If you can’t see success, you can’t reward it • If you can’t reward success, you’re probably rewarding failure • If you can’t see success, you can’t learn from it • If you can’t recognize failure, you can’t correct it • If you can demonstrate results, you can gain support for the work • Adapted from: Reinventing Government, Osborne and Gaebler, 1992

  25. Evaluation Steps • Develop data collection methods before the start of the intervention • Include both process and outcomes measures • Include the student voice • Decide what success would look like • Collect data often • Use the outcome data in both a formative and summative way

  26. Building a Logic ModelFor Evaluation

  27. Questions and Answers

  28. Thank You for Attending! For Further Information… Brad C. Phillips 619-252-8503 bphillips@iebcnow.org Jordan E. Horowitz 562-743-7920 jhorowitz@iebcnow.org www.iebcnow.org We’re happy to help as you move forward!

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