This volume provides practical ways colleges can focus on the College Completion Agenda. Originally begun as an economicworkforce issue for the Obama administration, the College Completion Agenda has been adopted by myriad educationalinstitutions, public and private funders, and others.
The identified ‘Big Goal’ is to increase theproportion of Americans with high quality college degrees andcredentials from 39% of the population to 60% by 2025. To date, much advice has been offered to colleges about what the issues areand what needs to be done. However, there is considerable workbeing done at colleges around the country to address the identifiedissues.This volume introduces some of these policies andpractices–the thinking behind them, research supporting them, roles to be fulfilled, and impact on the student experience
This is the 164th volume of this Jossey-Bass higher educationquarterly report series, an essential guide for presidents, vicepresidents, deans, and other leaders in today’s open-doorinstitutions, this quarterly provides expert guidance in meetingthe challenges of their distinctive and expanding educationalmission.
Tabela de Conteúdo
EDITORS’ NOTES 1
Brad C. Phillips, Jordan E. Horowitz
FOREWORD 5
Walter G. Bumphus
1. Leadership Matters: Addressing the Student Success and Completion Agenda 7
Byron N. Mc Clenney
Transforming institutional culture to focus on student success is a key role of leadership. The over nine years of observations of leadership coaches in Achieving the Dream provide insight into making this transformation.
2. Maximizing Data Use: A Focus on the Completion Agenda 17
Brad C. Phillips, Jordan E. Horowitz
Community colleges are data rich but information poor. A transformative model is presented for engaging educational institutions in using data to inform policy and program decisions focused on increasing completion.
3. Get With the Program … and Finish It: Building Guided Pathways to Accelerate Student Completion 27
Davis Jenkins, Sung-Woo Cho
Placing students in defined pathways upon entry has been shown to dramatically increase student completion. A growing number of colleges and universities are redesigning academic programs and support services to create guided pathways.
4. Acceleration Strategies in the New Developmental Education Landscape 37
Andrea Venezia, Katherine L. Hughes
New approaches to increasing remedial/developmental educational success are being tested and showing promise, helping more students prepare for, and move into, college-level courses more quickly.
5. Working Across the Segments: High Schools and the College Completion Agenda 47
Shelly Valdez, David Marshall
An intersegmental approach to vertical curriculum alignment can increase student preparation for higher education and improve student success. New content standards make teaming with local high schools even more important as these standards are implemented.
6. Tuning Toward Completion 57
Marcus Kolb, Michelle Kalina, Adina Chapman
Tuning has significant benefits in supporting the completion agenda, and community colleges have a significant role to play in this national movement.
7. Unmet Need and Unclaimed Aid: Increasing Access to Financial Aid for Community College Students 67
Julia I. Lopez
Community colleges must make financial aid receipt a priority for lowincome students if they hope to increase completion.
INDEX 7
Sobre o autor
Brad C. Phillips and Jordan E. Horowitz are the authors of The College Completion Agenda: Practical Approaches for Reaching the Big Goal: New Directions for Community Colleges, Number 164, published by Wiley.