accelerating opportunity arkansas

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Accelerating Opportunity Arkansas. Bidders Webinar March 7, 2013. Agenda. Welcome & Webinar Goals Barbara Endel, JFF and Mike Leach, AATYC Setting the Stage – Why Arkansas is Joining AO Mike Leach, AATYC, Jim Smith, Arkansas Adult Education, and Karon Rosa, Arkansas Career Pathways - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Accelerating Opportunity Arkansas

Bidders Webinar

March 7, 2013

Agenda

• Welcome & Webinar GoalsBarbara Endel, JFF and Mike Leach, AATYC

• Setting the Stage – Why Arkansas is Joining AOMike Leach, AATYC, Jim Smith, Arkansas Adult Education, and Karon Rosa, Arkansas Career Pathways

• Overview of Accelerating OpportunityBarbara Endel, JFF

• Expectations of Selected CollegesBarbara Endel, JFF and Mike Leach, AATYC

• TimelineBarbara Endel, JFF and Mike Leach, AATYC

Setting The Stage

Why Accelerating Opportunity?• To increase Arkansas’s economic prosperity by

preparing more working-age adults to enter the labor market;

• As a strategic way to support PACE and other reform goals; and

• To increase the transition rate of adult education students into postsecondary programs.

About Accelerating Opportunity

Our Goals:• Fundamentally change the way Adult Education and

Professional/Technical Education are structured and delivered

• Promote state and institution policies to increase the number of individuals completing credentials with labor market value.

• Help adults earn a GED at the same time as they are learning valuable technical skills.

• Improve the college experience for low-skilled adult learners

National Movement

5

RI

HI

MT

WY

ID

WA

OR

NV

UT

CA

AZ

ND

SD

NE

CO

NM

TX

OK

KS

AR

LA

MO

IA

MN

WI

IL IN

KY

TN

MS AL GA

FL

SD

NC

VA WV

OH

MI

NY

PA

MD

DE

NJ CT

MA

ME

VT NH

AK

Improving Student Experiences and Outcomes

What low-skilled, non-traditional students typically face:

Emerging Solutions:

Confusing array of career programs Integrated instructional models, college prep & career pathways

General education focus as the default for programs and services

Programs and services specifically geared to career pathways

Long remedial education sequences Acceleration, compression and

dual-enrollment strategies

Inadequate or inaccessible support services

Array of support services, including intrusive advising

Programs not designed with career advancement in mind

Programs designed around labor market opportunities and needs

Career Pathways

Career Pathways

Career Pathways

Accelerating Opportunity

Accelerating Opportunity

Washington’s Integrated Basic Education and Skills Training (I-BEST)

Model

7

Certified

Vocational

Skills

At least 50%

overlap

Basic

Academic

Skills

Support Services

The Arkansas Accelerating Opportunity Model

8

ADHE-Approved

Educational Pathway

At least 25%

overlap

Adult Education

Career Pathways

Recruitment

Target Population:• Students with or without a High School diploma or GED• TANF-eligible students (in order to use Career Pathways

resources); others can be enrolled as well if there are resources available

Target skill level: • High Intermediate Basic Education through Adult Secondary

Education (NRS levels 4-6/grade level 6 and above)• High Intermediate ESL (NRS level 5 and above)

Students can be referred to the program through Adult Education, Career Pathways, college admissions, or community partners

Implementing the Model

To successfully implement this model, colleges must be willing and able to:

• Enroll students without a High School diploma or GED in ADHE-approved educational pathways

• Provide integrated instruction (team teaching) in courses that lead to a Certificate of Proficiency (or higher)

Integrated Instruction

Team-teaching:• Overlap in instructional time (can range from

25% to 100%)• Shared planning time• Joint learning outcomes• Instructors are equal – the Adult Education

instructor is not just a classroom aide• Not the same as dual-enrollment – much more

collaboration between the two instructors.

Integrated Instruction

Additional Courses Leading to Technical Certificate

Courses Leading To Certificate of Proficiency

Additional Courses Leading to AA/AAS

ADHE-Approved Educational Pathway

All courses team-taught Some courses may be team-taught

Possible GED attainment

Selected Colleges Must Commit To:

• Demonstrating of support from college leadership as well as administrators of applicable CTE departments, ABE, academic affairs, and student services

• Developing at least two career pathways that adhere to the non-negotiable elements listed above, including career pathways targeting high-wage high-demand sectors and are ADHE approved

• Enrolling students in the target population (NRS levels 4-6, or testing at 6th grade level and above) in ADHE-approved educational pathways

• Identifying co-instructors from basic skills and college-level professional-technical programs, with at least a 25 percent overlap of the instructional time to support both literacy and workforce skills gains. Instructors must be open and willing to engage in this innovative instructional model.

Selected Colleges Must Commit To:

• Developing integrated learning outcomes with joint faculty review of student progress and collective evaluation of program effectiveness by all faculty and administrators involved.

• Providing comprehensive support services, including using career pathways program infrastructure for eligible students.

• Adopting or adapting college policies and financing models to ensure that effective Accelerating Opportunity programs are sustained and expanded to assist many more adult learners in obtaining postsecondary credentials.

• Collecting data on participants, including employment outcomes• Producing 750 credentials from across the four colleges over a

three-year time period.

Timeline

• Application Deadline: March 22nd, 2013,5 p.m. CDT

Please email the completed proposal to Mike Leach (mleach@aatyc.org)

• Grantees Announced: Successful applicants will be notified by Monday, April 1st, 2013

• National Conference on Integrated Basic Skills Pathways: April 30th-May 1st 2013 in Seattle, WA .

(Travel will be covered by AATYC.)

• Team Teaching Institute: Tuesday, May 21, 2013 from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. in Little Rock. (Location TBD)

Questions?

You can type questions into the chat box (please send to everyone) or raise your hand to be unmuted.

If you have questions after the webinar please contact Mike Leach (mleach@aatyc.org)

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