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Preparing for College: Building Expectations, Changing Realities

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Outside the curriculum: Do co-curricular activities influence college-going? Co-Curriculum refers to school- and community-based activities that take place ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preparing for College: Building Expectations, Changing Realities


1
Preparing for CollegeBuilding Expectations,
Changing Realities
  • William G. Tierney
  • Wilbur-Kieffer Professor of Higher Education
  • and Director
  • Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis
  • Rossier School of Education, WPH 701
  • University of Southern California
  • Los Angeles, CA 90089-0031
  • www.usc.edu/dept/chepa

2
Nine Key Components of College Preparation
Programs
  • 1. A rigorous academic curriculum
  • 2. Academic, college, and career counseling
  • 3. Co-curricular activities

3
Nine Key Components of College Preparation
Programs (cont.)
  • 4. Incorporation of students cultures
  • 5. Family and community engagement
  • 6. Peer support

4
Nine Key Components of College Preparation
Programs (cont.)
  • 7. Mentoring
  • 8. Timing of interventions
  • 9. Funding priorities

5
Component 1
  • A rigorous academic curriculum

6
Academic preparationThe key to college
enrollment
  • What is Academic Preparation?
  • Preparation generally refers to completing a
    substantial number of rigorous courses during the
    high school years. It points to the development
    of skill levels that will prepare students for
    college level work.

7
Strategies for supporting and strengthening
academics in college preparatory programs
  • Begin efforts to improve academic preparation
    before high school.
  • Ensure that students have opportunities to enroll
    in rigorous coursework.
  • Offer additional academic support.
  • Coordinate with K-12 and college educators.

8
Component 2
  • Academic, college, and career counseling

9
Guiding adviceQuality counseling enhances
college-going
  • Fast Facts on Counseling
  • Recommended maximum counselor-
  • to-student ratio 1250
  • National average counselor-to-
  • student ratio 1513
  • Average counselor-to-student ratio in
  • large urban cities 1740

10
Strategies for improving counseling services
  • Begin early and foster long-term relationships.
  • Make counseling a priority in programmatic
    design.
  • Decrease counselor-to-student ratios.
  • Acknowledge students diverse needs.

11
Strategies for improving counseling services
(cont.)
  • Improve counselor training and professional
    development.
  • Acknowledge the role of teachers in the
    counseling process.
  • Partner with colleges.
  • Engage families

12
Component 3
  • Co-curricular activities

13
Outside the curriculumDo co-curricular
activities influence college-going?
  • Co-Curriculum refers to school- and
    community-based activities that take place
    outside the structure and timing of the regular
    classroom and school day.

14

Types of social activities associated with
college prep programs
  • Informal
  • before- and after-school activities
  • weekend social events
  • group trips to cultural events
  • hanging out with friends in the
  • same college prep program

15
Types of social activities associated with
college prep programs
  • Formal
  • election to a college prep leadership
  • office
  • participation in summer workshops
  • that are social in nature
  • retreats to discuss college-going plans
  • a trip to visit colleges

16
Types of social activities associated with
college prep programs
  • Formal (cont.)
  • participation in graduation ceremonies from the
    program
  • enrollment in college classes
  • participation in service learning activities

17
Strategies for enhancing co-curricular activities
  • Offer a wide range of academic and non-academic
    activities.
  • Minimize obstacles to participation.
  • Solicit student input on worthwhile
    extra-curricular activities.

18
Strategies for enhancing co-curricular activities
(cont.)
  • Incorporate cultural values and themes into
    extra-curricular events.
  • Ensure that all students have access to
    school-sponsored activities.
  • Partner with civic groups and elected officials.

19
Component 4
  • Incorporation of students cultures

20
Cultural wealth Tapping into local identities
  • Defining culture in college prep
  • We define culture as the racial and ethnic
    identity of the students and their families in
    college preparation programs.

21
Strategies for bringing student cultures into
college preparation
  • Engage the family and community in college
    preparation.
  • Utilize peer groups.
  • Use cultural resources.

22
Component 5
  • Family and community engagement

23
Family mattersFamilies influence college-going
  • Why involve families?
  • Engagement with families is a way of affirming
    students cultures.
  • Family members can provide relief and additional
    support.

24
Strategies for engaging families
  • Start early to bridge the information gap.
  • Encourage networking.
  • Empower parents as advocates.
  • Inform families of pathways to college.

25
Component 6
  • Peer support

26
Friends in school Peer groups influence
college-going
  • Peer groups play a crucial role in identity
    development and building college aspirations for
    minority youth.

27
Strategies for bringing peers into the college
preparation process
  • Cultivate the peer groups that might be
    produced by college preparation programs.
  • Use peer groups as a resource to be developed.
  • Develop a sense of teamwork within the peer
    group.
  • Incorporate the socio-cultural aspects of peer
    groups.

28
Component 7
  • Mentoring

29
The tasks of mentoringA critical component for
college-going
  • Purposes of mentoring
  • to provide general guidance for college and
    career
  • to offer additional support to marginalized youth
    by affirming self worth and cultural norms
  • to encourage college-going aspirations
  • to affect behavioral outcomes (e.g. truancy, drug
    use)
  • to improve grades and test scores

30
Fast facts on mentoring
  • The average mentor program serves 291 students.
  • The average mentor-to-student ratio is 125.
  • Students receive less than 5 hours of mentoring
    contact per month.
  • The average cost for a program is 1,100 per
    student per year, excluding the volunteer time
    for the mentor and in-kind contributions,
    materials, and equipment.

31
The tasks of mentoringA critical component
forcollege-going (cont.)
  • Types of formal mentoring programs
  • peer-based
  • school staff and faculty-based
  • community volunteers
  • corporate/professional volunteers
  • one-on-one programs
  • one mentor working with a small group of
  • protégés

32
Strategies for developing a mentoring program in
college preparation
  • Specify the role of the mentor and clarify
    mentoring goals.
  • Develop and support long-term mentor
    relationships.
  • Understand the cultural considerations that must
    be taken into account in mentoring programs.

33
Strategies for developing a mentoring program in
college preparation (cont.)
  • Evaluate mentors and mentoring programs so that
    their potential can be better understood.

34
Component 8
  • Timing of interventions

35
Strategies for scheduling interventions
  • Engage students in rigorous academic preparation
    and college guidance no later than middle school.
  • Provide students with ongoing information about
    college and the admissions process.

36
Strategies for scheduling interventions (cont.)
  • Foster college-going aspirations beginning in
    elementary grades.
  • Help students prepare for college entrance exams.

37
Component 9
  • Funding priorities

38
Weighing the costsEvaluating quality,
determining priorities
  • Steps to guide cost-benefit analysis
  • 1. Determine the costs of the program
  • What is the total cost of the program, including
    in-kind donations?
  • What is the cost per student?
  • What are the program components, and what does
    each cost?

39
Weighing the costsEvaluating quality,
determining priorities (cont.)
  • 2 . Consider the programs benefits
  • How does the program track outcomes? How are
    benefits measured?
  • Does the program produce the impact it was
    designed to produce?
  • What are the intangible benefits of the program?
    What are the tangible benefits?

40
Weighing the costsEvaluating quality,
determining priorities (cont.)
  • 3. Pay attention to the following aspects of
    determining costs
  • Quality of information How thorough are the
    data you are using in your analysis?
  • Short vs. long-term impact Do we know what
    happens to students well after the intervention
    is complete?

41
Weighing the costsEvaluating quality,
determining priorities (cont.)
  • Pay attention to the following aspects of
    determining costs (cont.)
  • In-kind contribution Does the program take
    advantage of in-kind contributions and community
    resources? What relationships might be beneficial
    for the program?
  • Evaluate continuously Create a feedback loop
    that relies on consistent program evaluation.
    When evaluation is an integral part of program
    maintenance, programs can operate more
    effectively.

42
Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis
  • Rossier School of Education
  • WPH 701
  • University of Southern California
  • Los Angeles, CA 90089-0031
  • www.usc.edu/dept/chepa
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