7
College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni Karl Reid, Moderator (Senior Vice President for Research, Innovation, and Member Engagement, UNCF) Panelists: Kya Dixon (Senior Program Officer of College Programs, the College Success Foundation) Ashref Elshazli (Alumni Affairs Coordinator, Friendship Collegiate Academy) Sirwalter Hemphill (Management Analyst, OSSE) Emma Levine (Alumni Program Manager and Associate College Counselor, Thurgood Marshall Academy) 4th Annual Postsecondary & Career Education Conference

College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

  • Upload
    tyler

  • View
    46

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni. 4th Annual Postsecondary & Career Education Conference. Karl Reid, Moderator (Senior Vice President for Research, Innovation, and Member Engagement, UNCF) Panelists: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

• Karl Reid, Moderator (Senior Vice President for Research,

Innovation, and Member Engagement, UNCF)

Panelists: • Kya Dixon (Senior Program Officer of College Programs, the

College Success Foundation) • Ashref Elshazli (Alumni Affairs Coordinator, Friendship Collegiate

Academy) • Sirwalter Hemphill (Management Analyst, OSSE)• Emma Levine (Alumni Program Manager and Associate College

Counselor, Thurgood Marshall Academy)

4th Annual Postsecondary & Career Education Conference

Page 2: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

A Chronic Pipeline Crisis Exists

3,230,000African Americans

5,485,000Latinos

1,243,550(38%)

Will Not Complete High School

455,175(38%)

Will Graduate

788,621(40%)

Will Not Enroll in College

1,986,450(62%)

Will Complete High School

1,197,829(60%)

Will Enroll in College

742,654(62%)

Will Not Graduate

2,169,893(62%)

Will Enroll in College

3.482,975(64%)

Will Complete High School

2,002,025(36%)

Will Not Complete High School

1,313,082(38%)

Will Not Enroll in College

1,063,248(49%)

Will Graduate

1,106,646(51%)

Will Not Graduate

11,xxx,xxxWhites

2,093,040(19%)

Will Not Complete High School

11,xxx,xxxWhites

2,525,198(28%)

Will Not Enroll in College

11,xxx,xxxWhites

8,922,960(81%)

Will Complete High School

11,xxx,xxxWhites

2,559,105(40%)

Will Not Graduate

11,xxx,xxxWhites

3,838,657(60%)

Will Graduate

11,xxx,xxxWhites

11,xxx,xxxWhites

11,016,000Whites

6,397,762(72%)

Will Enroll in College

Sources:"Public School Dropouts and Graduates from the Common Core of Data, 2007-08", (2010) US Department of Education National Center of Education Statistics. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. <http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2010/2010341.pdf>

"Public School Dropouts and Graduates from the Common Core of Data, 2007-08", (2010) US Department of Education National Center of Education Statistics. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. <http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2010/2010341.pdf>

Aud, S., Hussar, W., Kena, G., Bianco, K., Frohlich, L., Kemp, J., Tahan, K. (2011). "The Condition of Education 2011" (NCES 2011-033). U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. <http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/indicator_trc.asp>

Aud, S., Hussar, W., Kena, G., Bianco, K., Frohlich, L., Kemp, J., Tahan, K. (2011). "The Condition of Education 2011" (NCES 2011-033). U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. < http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/pdf/coe_pgr.pdf>

Page 3: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

Low-income studentsFurther defining the college-completion challenge

<10% of students from low-income families graduate from college by their mid-20s

Page 4: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

There Are Numerous Contributing FactorsCertain academically disabling factors compound with each educational level

Elementary• Teacher

subject-matter proficiency

• Special education assignments

• 4th Grade Syndrome

• Skills deficits

Middle School• “Elementary”

factors+• Peer influence• Identity

development• “Good at”/”Bad at”• Tracking• Teacher

expectations• Oppositional

attitude• Affirmation

elsewhere (sports, music, clowning)

• High School preparation hindered

High School• MS factors +

• Identity reified

• Expectations reified

• “Good at”/”Bad at” reified

• Aspirations reified

• Academic self-efficacy reified

• College Readiness lacking

College• HS factors +

• “Smartness” questioned

• Habits of Mind

• Faculty integration

• Academically-oriented social integration

• Financial challenges

• Persistence is threatened

Page 5: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

Establishing an Ecosystem for Achievement

Environment (Culture)

Motivation

BehaviorIdentity

• Affirmation• Academic rigor (within Zone

of Proximal Development)• Rewards/Punishment• Faculty/Teacher integration• Peer integration (posse’s)

• Racial, gender, sexual orientation

• “To be Popular or Smart”

• Cultural Fluency

• “Habits of Mind”• Deliberate Practice• Self-explanation• Reading

comprehension• Utilizing study groups

• Confidence• Mindset• Attribution• Resilience

Self-Efficacy“I Can”

STEM4All Planning GroupKarl W. Reid, Ed.D.

1.3.14Adapted from Bandura, A. (1997). Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control. New York: W. H. Freeman and Company.

Page 6: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

• Karl Reid, Moderator (Senior Vice President for Research,

Innovation, and Member Engagement, UNCF)

Panelists: • Kya Dixon (Senior Program Officer of College Programs, the

College Success Foundation) • Ashref Elshazli (Alumni Affairs Coordinator, Friendship Collegiate

Academy) • Sirwalter Hemphill (Management Analyst, OSSE)• Emma Levine (Alumni Program Manager and Associate College

Counselor, Thurgood Marshall Academy)

4th Annual Post-Secondary & Career Education Conference

Page 7: College Retention Efforts and Engaging Alumni

7

FindingsWhat Matters for High-Achieving Black Males in College?

They had high confidence in their academic ability They had strong relationships with faculty They were more socially integrated in the campus

community They possessed a strong "internalized" racial identity

“The way a student perceives and responds to events in the college setting will differentiate his or her college experience

and shape his or her outcomes.” W. R. Allen