1 / 22

High Risk, High reward

Shani Keller ◦ Anne Zanzucchi ◦ Elizabeth Boretz. High Risk, High reward. Supporting Perseverance and Achievement of At-Risk Matriculates at UC Merced. December 1, 2011. University of California, Merced is the first UC campus in the San Joaquin Valley. Fall 2011:.

lynne
Download Presentation

High Risk, High reward

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. Shani Keller ◦ Anne Zanzucchi ◦ Elizabeth Boretz High Risk, High reward Supporting Perseverance and Achievement of At-Risk Matriculates at UC Merced December 1, 2011

  2. University of California, Merced is the first UC campus in the San Joaquin Valley Fall 2011: 36% Hispanic; 28% Asian; 20% White; 7% African-American; 3% Non-resident alien 56% First Generation 58% Speak a language other than English at home 48% received federal Pell Grants (Fall 2009) UC Merced Profile Institutional Planning & Analysis Enrollment Table, www.ipa.ucmerced.edu

  3. Who are “At-Risk” Students? Hispanic and Pell Grant-Eligible students at UC Merced have the lowest 5-year graduation rates UC Merced Profile Institutional Planning & Analysis, Retention & Graduation Rates, www.ipa.ucmerced.edu

  4. Who are “At-Risk” Students? Hispanic students and students with the lowest parental income levels at UC Merced have the lowest 2-year cumulative GPA University of California Statfinder, www.ucop.edu

  5. Who are “At-Risk” Students? First Generation, Pell Grant Eligible, and Hispanic students are disproportionately represented among dismissed students

  6. Grant-funded Programs Supporting At-Risk Students • Summer Bridge • Most at-risk • 4 years • Faculty contact • Summer prep in ELA & Math • Connections with campus services • Textbook Rental • Most at-risk (EOP) • 2 years • Staff & peer-to-peer contact • 2/3 Reduction in price of textbooks

  7. Institutional Support for At-Risk Students Institutionally funded supports to most at-risk students • Mid-Semester Academic Interventions • All lower-division classes report grades at mid-semester • All first-year students with at least 1 D+ required to attend Success Workshop • Incentives for participation; excellent outcomes; average 50% of freshmen struggle

  8. Institutional Support for At-Risk Students, cont. Institutionally funded supports to most at-risk students • USTU 010 Freshman Success Course • Life skills • Skills Workshops (optional) • Reading strategies, time management, stress management, note-taking, exam preparation, learning preferences

  9. Institutional Support for At-Risk Students, cont. Institutionally funded supports to most at-risk students • Excel Program (Natural Sciences) • Service Learning (Engineering) • Calvin E. Bright Success Center

  10. Summer Bridge Program “In college we are treated as adults, and I understand professors’ expectations now.” • Student Selection • First generation • Hispanic, at first, then de facto • Summer Preparation • English • Math • Academic Discourse • School Year • Advising • Mentoring

  11. Summer Bridge Program, cont. • Feedback Received • Faculty feedback • Evaluation/Data • Student feedback • From Input to Output • Student selection • School year offerings • Follow-up • Building Community

  12. Bridge Student Year 1 Achievement Bridge students did well on required intro courses Cohorts Entering UCM as First Time Freshmen 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

  13. Bridge Student Retention Bridge students persisted in their undergrad education Cohorts Entering UCM 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

  14. Bridge Student Comparative Achievement Bridge students made progress towards closing the gap in GPA

  15. Textbook Rental Program Student Quote on program • FIPSE Grant • Participation (new participants): • Spring 2010: 29 • Fall 2010: 58 • Spring 2011: 7 • Additional Components: • Workshops • Advising • Mentoring • Social support/networking

  16. Textbook Rental Program, cont. • Feedback Received • Evaluation/Data • Student feedback • From Input to Output • Student selection • School year offerings • Follow-up • Building Community

  17. Achievement by Program Utilization Students taking full advantage of the textbook rental program earned a Higher GPA than other rental-eligible students Spring 2010 Rental-Eligible Students

  18. Rental Participant Year 1 Achievement Renters performed comparably to their peers in Freshman Writing Courses 2010-11 School Year

  19. Program Side by Side • Summer Bridge & • Most at-risk • 4 years • Faculty contact • Connections with campus services • Students persisted, closed achievement gap • Textbook Rental • Most at-risk • 2 years • Staff & peer-to-peer contact • Students maintained good academic standing

  20. Secrets of Success • Courageous conversations • Rigorous, insightful evaluation • Passion for students • Supportive institutional audience

  21. Lessons Learned • Support is available! • University is not impersonal – faculty is passionate about student success, like K-12 • Courageous conversations are necessary for personal and institutional change • Building community among at-risk students promotes success • There is no substitute for the impact of high-touch programs : low staff: student ratios, aggressive intervention, mandatory engagement with campus staff and resources. It’s demanding, but it works.

  22. Contact Information Anne Zanzucchi, Associate Director Merritt Writing Program, UC Merced azanzucchi@ucmerced.edu (209) 228-4173 Elizabeth Boretz, Director Calvin E. Bright Success Center, UC Merced eboretz@ucmerced.edu (209) 228-2993 Shani Keller, Evaluation Analyst skeller@ucdavis.edu (530) 752-2781

More Related