1 Stuart Boersma: Professional Kara Gabriel: Director of Development Coordinator, Mathematics. Undergraduate Research, Psychology. Kandee Cleary: Director of Jenna Hyatt: Director of George Drake: English Vicki Sannuto: Director of Diversity and Inclusivity, and Sociology (chair). (chair), Writing Across the Curriculum Committee. Residence Life & New Student Programs. Career Services. 2 Attendance at past AAC&U conferences Support from the Provost’s Office New Professional Development Coordinator 3 • Credit to degree D/F/W • Career/grad sc. placement (5/6 year graduation rates) • Student Learning Retention rates 4 • Graduation rate? Washington state’s public institutions produce degrees at the 3rd-lowest total cost in the nation while having the best 6-year graduation rate (Office of Financial Management, WA). 5 UW WWU WSU CWU TESC EWU Nat’l TESC UW WWU CWU WSU Nat’l EWU • Each WA public campus is above the national average in freshman retention and all but EWU bested the national average in time-to-degree. Introduction to Higher Education Performance Plans - 3 • “CWU projects an increase in degree production due to two new strategies aimed at retaining students: a dualadmissions pilot program, and an on-line course alternative” (2012 Baccalaureate Performance Plans – Statewide Context, Office of Financial Management, WA) 6 6 Year Grad Rate 2005-2006 cohorts 5 Year Grad Rate 2005-2007 cohorts 4 Year Grad Rate 2005-2008 cohorts Asian 41.4% 39.2% 18.0% Black 31.6% 25.9% 10.6% CAMP Hispanic 67.9% 49.3% 19.1% Non-CAMP Hispanic 48.7% 41.4% 20.8% MultiEthnic 51.0% 41.3% 22.2% Native American 72.2% 62.1% 13.2% White 56.0% 49.9% 27.9% 7 The rise in tuition has, thus far at least, allowed the system to maintain and even grow enrollment. The public baccalaureates enrolled 98,500 student FTEs in the 2009 academic year, and 103,200 in 2011, a figure that’s projected to grow to 104,500 in 2012. This comes after a decade of enrollment growth at each campus. Growth at the branch campuses enabled the research universities to grow, especially after 2007, but it is Central Washington University that has had the highest percentage increase – nearly 30%. 130 Ten Year Enrollment Change, 4-Year Public Universities (relative to 2001-02 = 100) CWU 125 WSU 120 Statewide UW EWU TESC WWU 115 110 105 100 95 2001-02 2004 2006 2008 • 72.5% of full-time CWU undergraduates receive some kind of need-based financial aid (average amount is $7,526) • What can we do to make their students’ time at CWU successful? 2010 8 Investing time and effort. Interacting with faculty and peers about substantive matters. Experiencing diversity. Responding to more frequent feedback. Reflecting and integrating learning. Discovering relevance of learning through real-world applications. 9 Frequent feedback to students. Active learning. Increased student engagement. Inquiry-based approaches to learning. Collaborative experiences. Single multidimensional experience: HIP 10 11 12 13 Create Engaged and Supportive Community Involve Students in Purposeful Learning Connect Learning with Larger Questions and Real-World Settings Require Higher Order Inquiry, Exploration and ProblemSolving Engage Diversity as a Resource for Learning 14 Set appropriate expectations. Public Demonstration of results/accomplishments Allow students to synthesize and integrate their learning. Reflective essay. Require purposeful effort Activities demand that students devote considerable time and effort to purposeful tasks. Require daily decisions that deepen students’ investment in the activity. 15 Build Relationships Activities demand that students interact with faculty and peers over a period of time. Provide rich and frequent feedback HIPs need to be continually evaluated: Assessment should be built into each HIP. What are the documented benefits? Who is benefiting? Intentionality and Connections Scaffold: 1st year/ middle years / capstone 16 First Year Seminars and Experiences Common Intellectual Experiences Learning Communities Writing-Intensive Courses Collaborative Assignments and Projects Undergraduate Research Diversity/Global Learning Service Learning, Community-Based Learning Internships Capstone Courses and Projects 17 Think outside the box! Form/Strengthen partnerships between units: Librarians University Housing and Residence Hall Coordinators Faculty Academic Advisors Career Counselors Graduate Assistants Department Secretaries Administrators Student Transitions and Academic Resources (STAR) Douglas Honors College (DHC) Study Abroad Disability Services Center for Leadership and Civic Engagement 18 Group Discussions HIPs and CWU Presentations What are HIPs and Why we Care about them Collaborating Across Units at CWU Developing an Intentional Undergraduate Program Writing in Learning Communities Building a Community for Diverse Students Mixed Doubles Lunch Making HIPs successful at CWU Birds of a Feather Lunch Intentionality and CWU Individual/Team Time Work on your own ideas/projects/partnerships 19 It is up to us! A handful of dedicated individuals A few dynamic teams A couple of innovative partnerships KUDZU! HIP Central Learning Community (HIP CLiCk)? What else can we – as active and dedicated members of the campus community – do to support HIPs??? 20