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!

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