Thursday, March 29, 2012

For the Reading List

It’s a newsy week on Accelerating Achievement. Today, we’re highlighting recent releases from the Community College Research Center. And while we’ve not figured out how to provide a link that downloads directly to your brain, we hope that you’ll be able to find time to read the pieces that are relevant to your work.


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

State Policy Update

Our colleagues at Jobs for the Future have been compiling newsletters, writing reports, and posting blogs, all about developmental education, state policy, and every good thing. We wanted to be sure that you had the latest links to all this great material:
  • The March 2012 edition of Achieving Success is available here. Achieving Success is the state policy newsletter of Achieving the Dream and the Developmental Education Initiative, with features on all three elements of the DEI state policy framework. In data driven improvement, you'll find a synopsis of a recent convening on faculty engagement; in investment in innovation, there's a conversation with Shanna Smith Jaggers from CCRC discussing state policy implications of her recent work on the opposing forces that shape developmental education (she blogged about it here); and finally, in policy supports, you'll find viewpoints about placement polices from both SMARTER Balanced and PARCC common core assessment consortia.
  •  JFF has also has released a new set of tools to help states design performance-based funding systems. You can download Tying Funding to Community College Outcomes: Models, Tools, and Recommendations for States here.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

OH - IO!

Not only is the state representing in the Final Four, they're representing in developmental education reform. Last week in Community College Times, Madeline Patton featured three Ohio DEI colleges and three unique approaches to dev ed innovation. Patton details how Cuyahoga Community College, North Central State College, and Zane State College, working in distinctly different communities, have pursued a common goal of improving outcomes for students who need developmental education. From acceleration to attitude to advocacy, these colleges are seeing great results for their students. Read the whole article to learn more!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Redesigning & Restructuring Math Emporium Facilities: Challenging, But Not Impossible

Today, we’re returning to our “SCALERS: Round 2” series. Originally created by Paul Bloom, the SCALERS model identifies seven organizational capacities that support the successful scaling of a social enterprise: Staffing, Communicating, Alliance-building, Lobbying, Earnings Generation, Replicating Impact, and Stimulating Market Forces. (You can read an introduction to each driver in our first SCALERS series.) Now, we’re asking DEI colleges about how particular SCALERS drivers have contributed to their scaling efforts. We’ve looked at staffing. communicating, alliance-building, and lobbying. In the post below, Lucy Michal, mathematics professor at El Paso Community College, discusses earnings and resource generation as she shows how EPCC had to tackle the redesign of physical spaces to scale up the college’s math emporiums.

When El Paso Community College’s Developmental Education (DE) Math Standing Committee faculty restructured the DE math course sequence, redesigning curriculum presented familiar challenges, but redesigning facilities presented unfamiliar challenges. To help with this, college administrators sent committee members and deans to visit colleges who had undergone redesign.  After several site visits, committee members did not see any one design that would work for EPCC’s population of students and its multi-campus district. They had a lot of planning and resource building to do before scaling up DE math emporium course offerings.

The Committee’s initial proposal had three options:  joining two classrooms to create mini-emporium areas, identifying a store or warehouse to transform into a math emporium, or using an area in the Administrative Services Center to construct a math emporium for the District.

While college administrators reviewed these options, El Paso’s Developmental Education Initiative went into its first year with funding for identified needed technology—computers and printers—but redesigning facilities presented a greater challenge. One of the campus deans volunteered her campus to be the first to tear down a wall and construct a math emporium. Reconstruction occurred during winter break and in Spring 2010; the first mini-emporium offered DE math emporium courses in an area with 48 computers and one printer. The second emporium facility was made possible when funding for a new science wing included expansion of the math lab, an emporium with 34 computers, a tutoring area, and a seminar room. The third campus identified two classrooms and underwent the same construction used in the first campus to create a mini-emporium with 48 computers. 

The fourth campus in downtown El Paso presented a challenge because of its older buildings. At that time, the college purchased a building to expand the downtown student service offices; however, it was too small. The college president identified a different building for the downtown campus math emporium. The building, an old bakery across the street from the downtown campus, was transformed into a large area for the math emporium, a math lab, a tutoring area, three faculty offices, a math faculty meeting room, and a computer classroom. The old bakery is now an innovative Learning Emporium.

And finally, for its largest campus, the College purchased a portable building and is currently being constructed to house two large emporium rooms with 40 computers in each room, one computer classroom, and an area for tutoring and student study tables. Construction will be completed with enough time to allow for Fall 2012 DE math courses. 

The DE math committee learned more than just how to restructure their courses; they also learned about:
  • expanding and reconstructing facilities
  • furnishing learning areas
  • wiring for new technological classrooms
  • rescheduling class sections
  • designing learning spaces for students. 

Among the most important of the lessons learned was: always have a plan B in case construction deadlines are not met. With the emporium now in place on the final campus, the college will be offering over 80 percent of its DE math courses in campus-based math mini-emporium areas.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Scaling Up at Grad Nation

We’re at the 2012 Building a Grad Nation Summit, hosted by America’s Promise Alliance. According to board chair Alma Powell, building a grad nation is all about “bringing people together from all sectors of our communities to work in new, more coordinated ways and to inspire action.” You can read about their goals here. While they’ve got immense energy focused on the high school dropout crisis, there have been multiple sessions discussing connections to postsecondary education and careers (though we’re hoping to see a larger community college presence next year!)

In addition to postsecondary connection, there's also been talk about “scaling what works.” Since we’ve just released a guidebook on scaling up effective practices (check it out!), I’m interested in how other organizations are thinking and talking about this topic. (Really, I’m always interested in it—let’s be honest.) A session yesterday included panelists from large national organizations (the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Big Brothers Big Sisters), organizations taking the first steps to start affiliated organizations in a new city (Self Enhancement, Inc.), and smaller organizations beginning the process at the community level (Boston Rising, Zone 126).

One thing that’s been on my mind is the idea of starting small, but thinking big—in other words, how scale fits into early program design. I wanted to hear what these organizations had learned about planning for scale and ensuring that the resources invested in pilots went into something scale-able. Lucky for me, there was a Q&A session. Here’s what I heard:
 
  • Limit the number of moving parts. Reducing the complexity of your approach will make it easier to replicate.
  •  Articulate a simple, clear theory of change. Identify the inputs necessary to reach the outcome you want. Then determine the supports you’ll need to do just that. 
  • Consider cost from the beginning. Pilot design should not just be about the mechanisms for delivering the program—it’s about the entire operation. And that includes resources. 
  • Think about who you can partner with to disseminate your strategy and expand your reach. Are there technology options? Are there organizations that already do something that you want to integrate?

I like this idea of keeping it simple—both the theory of change and the program. But I know that it’s difficult to do when you’re addressing complex issues and working in equally complex organizations. Just one more reason to tackle these big questions from the very beginning and do everything you can to set your program up for success.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Announcing More to Most!


We are delighted to announce the release of MDC’s latest publication, More to Most: Scaling Effective Community College Practices. More to Most is a guide for community colleges that are expanding small or pilot programs into larger, sustainable efforts that serve most—if not all—of the students who can benefit from them. You can watch an introductory slide show and download a copy from www.more2most.org.

As we discuss often on this blog, community colleges across the country have developed unique programs that help students succeed and put them on a path to a better life. The Developmental Education Initiative colleges and states have been vital partners as we’ve learned together about the resources and practices that are required to scale-up effective developmental education programming—and to help students accelerate through or bypass remediation altogether. Much of that learning is reflected in the pages of More to Most, including examples of promising practices from many of the DEI colleges and states. We’ve also included material that’s been featured on Accelerating Achievement, including the SCALERS model developed by the Center for the Advancement of Social Enterprise at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and case examples from Kingsborough Community College, the Academy for College Excellence, and Chaffey College.

Even in focused efforts like DEI and Achieving the Dream, deciding which programs to expand and how to do it is a complex process that can waste valuable time and resources if not conducted thoughtfully. The comprehensive—but not prescriptive!—process outlined in More to Most helps you assess which programs are ripe for expansion, and gives direction on how to design a scale-up plan—and it’s all designed to dovetail with planning structures already in place.

To test out the process, we reached beyond the DEI network to Jackson Community College, an Achieving the Dream college in Jackson, MI. JCC recently used More to Most in its decision to expand three student success initiatives. With the strategies outlined in the guidebook, faculty, staff, and administrators at Jackson demonstrated the program’s effectiveness and connected that success to the college’s strategic plan. They examined the expansion’s budget implications, how it would be evaluated, and created a work plan. Finally, they examined the policy implications of the expansion. The undertaking involved deep conversations among faculty, student services, and business office staff, and the resulting plan is a great example of how the process can be customized to dovetail with any college’s specific needs or culture. (Click here to learn more about Jackson’s experience from a March 1 spotlight session at the recent ATD D.R.E.A.M. event.)

If you want to see how the process might work on your campus, head on over to more2most.org and download your copy. Let us know what you think!

Friday, March 9, 2012

One More D.R.E.A.M.: On the Road Again

Today, one final dispatch from last week's trip to Dallas. Richard Hart, MDC communications director, wrote this after attending one of the fantastic concurrent sessions at D.R.E.A.M.

The most exciting thing I learned during a presentation last week by Zane State College about the college’s innovations in developmental education during D.R.E.A.M. (Achieving the Dream’s inspiring confab on student success), was this: the students seem to really like what Zane State’s doing.

That, and developmental education instructors from around the country are apparently big fans of Willie Nelson.

Becky Ament, associate dean for developmental education at Zane State, and Beth Fischer, director of institutional research and planning at the college, talked about the evolution of the college’s compressed dev ed math courses and their dev ed courses linked to college-level classes, together a program they call “ADVANCE.”  In a nutshell, Becky and Beth walked the packed room through the successes and initial limitations of ADVANCE, which includes voluntary case management, on-campus promotion, and higher retention and completion rates for students who take advantage of the program. (Their PowerPoint presentation will be uploaded to the ATD website soon.)

But one of the less quantifiable benefits of the program seems to be the students’ response. Becky and Beth played videos of interviews done with students after they’d been through the program to record their reactions, and they were remarkably positive (with Becky and Beth reassuring the crowd that the students hadn’t been prompted).

“They develop a lot more friendships and collaborative relationships,” Becky said about students who took dev ed English along with a linked sociology class.

One student interviewed said before classes began she was nervous about her just-in-time dev ed instruction that was paced to meet the needs of her linked college-level course. She didn’t like or understand the program at first, but by the time it was over she realized: “It’s really fun.” Another benefit for students, Becky explained: taking the paired courses at the same time cuts a student’s costs.

There were challenges along the way, such as a shortage of advisers, lower-than-expected enrollment at first, inadequate promotion, some reluctant faculty, and the failure of ADVANCE classes to appear on the “live” course schedule. Dev ed faculty who attended the session offered lots of (solicited) advice, such as: make it mandatory, find out the times that are most convenient for students, and involve more faculty who support the program.
Things were already looking up by the second year, as advisors were fully integrated into the program, courses made it onto the “live” schedule, and promotion was increased. The ADVANCE program was developed with support from the Developmental Education Initiative, and Becky and Beth assured the group that the program would continue beyond the end of its DEI grant this year—and said the courses are even making money for the school.

And what’s that about Willie Nelson? Between breaks in the presentation, Beth hit the “play” button on her laptop and Willie’s voice rang out, singing “On the Road Again.” When she’d occasionally forget to hit the button, the crowd shouted “Play Willie!” By then, the students weren’t the only ones having fun.

Friday, March 2, 2012

I Had the Best DREAM!

We’re back at MDC’s offices in Durham, NC after a great week in Dallas, TX for DREAM 2012. Our brains and notebooks are overflowing with ideas and observations, but here are some quick highlights:
  • Thursday’s lunch featured a great student panel—so much ambition and intellect! Our favorite line: when an audience member asked what would make the experience better, one of the students said “They should have an advisor just for old people!” Another student likened his college to an ocean—vast and full of yet to be discovered secrets.
  • The student Twitter team and the videographers were energetic, friendly and prolific.
  • The student designed tee-shirts? Awesome.
  • Learning about Cuyahoga Community College’s Student Ambassadors and how they are becoming peer mentors—and helping their fellow students be more successful.
  • Often the first step in promoting financial management strategies at your college is helping students, faculty and administration understand the true financial barriers students face. Phillips Community College has done this through running a poverty simulation for its faculty and CCBC uses a video which explains the financial challenges students face. 
  • A presentation from Isaac Rowlett and Jyoti Gupta of Public Agenda highlighted the many ways in which colleges can engage their communities to advance student success. A key challenge to overcome: making sure that you invite the right people to be part of your planning efforts, not just the usual suspects who you have worked with in the past.
  • We briefly covered the equity panel discussion in our previous post, but here’s a great recap from the Community College Times.
  • North Central State College wins our vote for best session title: Scaling Up Math and English Boot Camps (or Are These Boot Camps Made for Walking?) Apparently, Nancy Sinatra was a featured participant. You can download slides and handouts from ALL of the DREAM sessions here.
Were you at DREAM, too? Share your highlights in the comments section!