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RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project http://cap.3csn.org October 11, 2013 USC’s Center for Urban Education Institute for Equity, Effectiveness, and Excellence at Hispanic Serving Institutions

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Page 1: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

RETHINKING REMEDIATION:

Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration

Katie Hern & Myra SnellLeaders of the California Acceleration Projecthttp://cap.3csn.org

October 11, 2013USC’s Center for Urban EducationInstitute for Equity, Effectiveness, and Excellence at Hispanic Serving Institutions

Page 2: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

SPREADING ACCELERATED REMEDIATION

The California Acceleration Project supports California’s 112 community colleges to redesign their English and Math curricula to increase student completion:

• Workshops and presentations to 100+ CA colleges

• Professional development for faculty from 42 colleges to offer new accelerated English & math courses

• CAP web resources supporting colleges to redesign remedial curricula – more than 10,000 unique hits in 18 months

http://cap.3csn.orgFunding provided by the state Chancellor’s Office Basic Skills Initiative,

Walter S. Johnson Foundation, LearningWorks, and CCRC

Page 3: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

HIGH ATTRITION IN REMEDIATION:CALIFORNIA-WIDE DATA

The lower a student begins in remedial sequences, the lower their completion of college-level courses:

• Just 16% of students who begin 3 or more levels below college English complete college English in 3 years.

• Just 6% of students who begin 3 or more levels below college math complete college math in 3 years.

• Students of color are disproportionately placed into these lower levels. More than 50% of Black and Latino community college students are placed 3+ levels below college math.

Page 4: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Illustration from the Basic Skills Cohort Tracker

Page 5: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

REMEDIAL ATTRITION: A STRUCTURAL PROBLEM

Students placed 2 levels below college English/Math face 6 “exit points” where they fall away:

• Do they enroll in the first course?• If they enroll, do they pass the first course? • If they pass, do they enroll in the next course? • If they enroll, do they pass the second course?• If they pass, do they enroll in the college-level course? • If they enroll, do they pass the college-level course?

Students placed 3 levels down face 8 exit points.

Page 6: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

ILLUSTRATION: CHABOT COLLEGE

Students beginning two levels below College English:• Do they enroll in the first course?

??%• If they enroll, do they pass the first course? 66%• If they pass, do they enroll in the next course? 93%• If they enroll, do they pass the second course? 75%• If they pass, do they enroll in the college-level course? 91%• If they enroll, do they pass the college-level course? 78%

(0.66)(0.93)(0.75)(0.91)(0.78)= 33%

Fall 2006 Cohort. Students tracked from their first developmental English enrollment and followed for all subsequent English enrollments for 3 years. Pass rates includes students passing on first or repeated attempts within timeframe. Basic Skills Cohort Tracker, DataMart.

Page 7: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT…IF MORE STUDENTS PASSED THE FIRST

COURSE,

How many would complete college level?

(0.66)(0.93)(0.75)(0.91)(0.78)= 33% If 75% passed the first course…

37% If 80% passed the first course…

40%If 90% passed the first course…

45% What if 90% passed and persisted at each point?

59%

Page 8: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

BOTTOM LINE

Improving our results within the existing multi-level system will never be enough.

We need to fundamentally restructure our approach to under-prepared students and eliminate the exit points where we lose them.

Page 9: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

ALTERNATIVES TO MULTI-SEMESTER REMEDIATION IN

READING/WRITING

Student completion of college English is significantly higher in accelerated models of remediation:

• Co-requisite models enroll “remedial” students into college-level courses and provide additional time and support to help them succeed.

• One-semester pre-requisite models provide a single well-designed semester of preparation to students with any placement score.

Shortening the remedial pathway by a semester is correlated with 20+ percentage points higher completion of college English in established models.

Page 10: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

CO-REQUISITE MODEL

Community College of Baltimore CountyUpper-level remedial students enroll in a regular college English course, plus a small support class with the same teacher.

Completion of College EnglishTraditional remedial sequence

Accelerated Learning Program

CCBC 40% 75%

Jenkins, D. et al (Sept. 2010). A Model for Accelerating Academic Success of Community College Remedial English Students: Is the Accelerated Learning Program (ALP) Effective and Affordable?(CCRC Working Paper No. 21). New York: Community College Research Center, Teachers College,

Columbia University.

Page 11: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

ONE-SEMESTER ACCELERATED PRE-REQUISITE TO COLLEGE ENGLISH

Chabot Las Positas Community College DistrictIntegrated reading and writing course open to students with any placement score below college-level; alternative to two-semester remedial sequence.

Completion of College English 2-semester

remedial pathAccelerated course

Chabot College 28%-34% 52%-57%

Las Positas College

35%-48% 67%-68%

3-year completion data from the Basic Skills Cohort Tracker. Student cohorts beginning in Fall 2000, 2003, 2006, and 2008. Repeats included. http://datamart.cccco.edu/Outcomes/BasicSkills_Cohort_Tracker.aspx

Page 12: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

ACCELERATED REMEDIATION IN MATH

Paradigm Shift: Math PathwaysRemediation not a repeat of K-12 mathematics through Algebra II. Instead, support tailored to the student’s intended program of study or meta-major.

• Intensive algebra preparation for students pursuing STEM, other calculus-based majors

• Students in other majors enroll in college-level Statistics or Liberal Arts Math, with co-requisite or accelerated pre-requisite support

• Redesigned accelerated course replaces 2-3 semesters of traditional sequence; some models offer a single semester of developmental preparation to students with any placement score

Page 13: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

WHY PATHWAY REDESIGN:MISALIGNMENT BETWEEN ALGEBRA & STATISTICS

Page 14: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

PROMISING PRELIMINARY RESULTS FROM SOME COLLEGES

Completion rate: percent of students enrolled at first census in a developmental math course that complete a transfer-level math course.

At both colleges most students enrolled in the Statistics pathway had a placement level of 2 to 3 levels below transfer-level math (65% at Cuyamaca and 73% at LMC). At both colleges the majority of students were non-Asian students of color (58% Cuyamaca, ~ 75% LMC).

Third-party evaluation of the first year of implementationfor 8 colleges in CAP’s first cohort due out in December.

Statistics Pathway (1 year)

Traditional Pathway (3 years)

Cuyamaca 50% (171) 23% (2315)

Los Medanos 60% (119) 21%(1756)

Page 15: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

A CASE STUDY: CLOSING THE EQUITY GAP

Cuyamaca Completion Rates by Ethnicity

Statistics Pathway (1 year)

Traditional Pathway (3 years)

Black non-Hispanic

42% (24) 10% (185)

HIspanic 45% (60) 22%(630)

Two or More

73% (11) 29% (93)

White non-

Hispanic

52%(68) 26%(1028)

Page 16: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

CAP Principles for Curricular Redesign

• Increasing completion of college-level English and Math requires shorter developmental pathways and broader access to college-level courses.

• We must reduce our reliance on high-stakes placement tests, which are poor predictors of student capacity.

• Streamlined developmental curricula should reflect five key principles:

– Backward design from college-level courses– Relevant, thinking-oriented curriculum– Just-in-time remediation– Low-stakes, collaborative practice– Intentional support for students’ affective needs

Page 17: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Reading/Writing Away from…

Traditional remediation front-loads sub-skills, on the assumption that before students can do a more complex task, they must have mastery of its component parts:

• In reading: workbook exercises on recognizing main ideas, building vocabulary

• In writing: grammar exercises before paragraph writing, personal essays before text-based essays

Page 18: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Toward…

In English, accelerated pedagogy gives under-prepared students experience with college-level reading, reasoning, and writing, with more in-class scaffolding and support than in a regular college course. Sub-skills in reading and writing are addressed as needed in the context of the more challenging work.

Page 19: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

From Deceleration to Acceleration: An Illustration

Page 20: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Typical Changes to Pedagogy

• More reading assigned, more challenging texts• More class time spent discussing and writing

about readings, less on grammar instruction• Readings used not just as “models” of writing,

but as content for students’ own papers• Writing assignments not simply about personal

experience – students write academic essays; paraphrase, quote, synthesize texts; and use critical thinking to answer higher-order questions

Page 21: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Insights from CAP faculty

“In the non-accelerated classroom, I think I focused more on teaching students to eliminate the superficial errors, so students in that class ended up producing a ‘prettier’ assignment; however, their writing did not illustrate complexity of thought….This was partly due to the formulaic nature of the assignments I used to give (topic sentence should look like this and be placed here, supporting details should go here, etc.) and mostly due to the lack of opportunity for critical thinking in my previous assignments.”  

Summer Serpas, Irvine Valley College

Page 22: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Insights from CAP faculty

“With the right support, students are capable of doing great academic work! They don’t need to start with a simple paragraph. They can write complex essays from

the start.”-Anonymous faculty reflection

“Teaching accelerated courses has changed my outlook on student capacity. I learned to trust in students’ ability to handle challenges and tackle meaningful academic work.

- Caroline Minkowski, City College SF

Page 23: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Window into the Classroom

• Video footage from Myra Snell’s pre-statistics course, Fall 2009

• Los Medanos students grapple with a problem from the national statistics exam, CAOS

• Video filmed and edited by Jose Reynoso, a student co-inquirer working with Snell through a grant from the Faculty Inquiry Network

http://vimeo.com/9055488 (or go to Vimeo and search for “Statpath”)

Page 24: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Math Pedagogy• Away from…decontextualized algebra, mimicry of

symbolic procedures and template word problems

An apple falling from a tree is h feet above the ground t seconds after it begins to fall, where h=64-16t^2. How long does it take the apple to hit the ground?

• Toward… data analysis and decision-making in the face of uncertaintyWhat factors correlate with low birth weights? Use graphs and conditional percentages to investigate the relationship between one of the factors in the data set and low birth weight. Present your results in 500 words or less, include relevant graphs and calculations.

Data set: Birth weights and 6 qualitative factors from a Massachusetts study of 189 pregnant women.

Page 25: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Changes to Math Pedagogy:An Illustration

Page 26: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project
Page 27: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Student Reflections

“It was developing my critical thinking. Not just looking at a formula and learning how to solve it – you know, where does this go, what are the rules….It’s more about evaluating, it’s more about the analysis…It’s more about understanding how to make a conclusion about the data set.” 

Describing her instructor’s approach to the class: “It’s kind of like…You dig in and get your hands dirty, however you feel you need to, and I’m here for you to help clarify, to help understand, help get you along better. I like that. It’s more like the instructor is a facilitator, as opposed to, I’m spewing out all this information that I need you to regurgitate on an exam.”

-Accelerated Pre-Statistics Students at College of the Canyons

 

Page 28: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Faculty Reflections

“I go to the board, and I start to lecture, and it kills the magic in the room….They’re not enthusiastic, they’re not paying attention, they’re looking at their cell phones….I figure, If I just explain at bit more, it’ll be ok. But the more I tried to front-load, the worse it got. And then this kid in the class comes up after….and he goes, ‘Now Terrie, I’ve noticed that your pedagogical practices have been about us discovering what we need, and I think what happened today is that you failed to trust the process.’”

-Terrie Nichols, Math Instructor, Cuyamaca

“I kind of started getting into this mindset, Well, if they don’t care, I can’t make them care…I really just thought it was laziness. Now I realize…it’s just that students are intimidated. They don’t want to act like they care because then they would be failures if they didn’t succeed.”

 -Evelyn Ngo, Math Instructor, College of the Canyons

 

 

Page 29: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Intentional Support for Students’ Affective Needs

Student fears and fixed mindsets are two of the biggest challenges to overcome in high-challenge accelerated classes. – The College Fear Factor by Rebecca Cox

Many community college students fear that they’re not cut out for college and cope with this fear by withdrawing and/or “avoiding assessment” (e.g., not take tests, not turn in papers)

– “Brainology” by Carol Dweck Whether students have a “fixed” or “growth” mindset about their own intelligence strongly influences their academic performance, especially their response to challenging tasks

Page 30: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

www.inquiry2improvement.com

The California Acceleration Project: Using a Cost Efficiency

Model to Investigate Key Outcomes and Fiscal

Considerations

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Dr. Rob JohnstoneStrengthening Student Success Conference

Burlingame, CAOctober 10, 2013

Page 31: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

www.inquiry2improvement.comNati onal Center for Inquiry & Improvement

Summary of Findings

When the model was applied to real-world data from the seven initial CAP colleges, we found that:

CAP significantly increases student completion of transferable math courses

CAP significantly lowers cost per completer

CAP reduces the cost of remediation and allows dollars to be reallocated to transferable courses

CAP results in a significant decrease in student tuition / books costs and an increase in wage gains by helping students complete sooner

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Page 32: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

www.inquiry2improvement.comNati onal Center for Inquiry & Improvement

College-based Outcomes, Cuyamaca College

Outcome Traditional CAP Improvement

1. Blended Entering Cohort Completion Rate of Transfer-Level Math Course 22% 50% 127%

2. Total cost of Pathway, Including Transfer Course $264,766 $289,796 -9%

3. Cost of Pre-Transfer Math Courses in Pathway $193,710 $149,426 23%

4. Cost per Completer of Transfer-Level Math Course $1,934 $831 57%

5. Percentage of Cost in Pre-Transfer Math Courses 73% 52% 30%

Page 33: RETHINKING REMEDIATION: Increasing Student Completion through Acceleration Katie Hern & Myra Snell Leaders of the California Acceleration Project

Join us!

• One-day regional workshops:– November 15, Clovis Center (Central Valley) – February 7, Chabot College (Bay Area)– March 7, West LA College (Greater LA)

• More information on all of today’s session will be available through the CAP website in the coming months: http://cap.3csn.org

[email protected], [email protected]