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Student Success. Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges September 2011. Measuring Student Success. Student Achievement Initiative data are the starting point. The Student Achievement Initiative measures annual attainment in terms of achievement gains. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Student SuccessWashington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges September 2011Measuring Student Success2Student Achievement Initiative data are the starting pointThe Student Achievement Initiative measures annual attainment in terms of achievement gains.

Achievement gains are function of student enrollments multiplied by achievement points per student.

Student Achievement measures all students to give an annual accounting total points.

Todays presentationAnalyzes student progress (2 years after start) and longer success rates (4 years after start).Students are tracked in cohorts using achievement data (+ other data) over a span of years (different than single year view of annual point gains for all students used to reward colleges).Data were presented at the Governance Institute for Student Success, June 2011.

Summary of FindingsMain findings no surpriseMore work needs to be done to improve transfer and workforce student completion rates. While majority of transfer and workforce students make gains, completion rates still relatively low after 4 years. Completing college math is barrier for majority of students and particularly difficult for students who need a lot of remedial math to start. Students of color in particular African American, Native American and Hispanic students have lowest progress and success rates. They are less likely than other workforce students to complete 30 college level credits by the end of their second year.Fewer than one in five basic skills students go on to college classes after four years.

Four-Year WA System Success Rates: New Transfer Students Entering WA Comm and Technical Colleges, Fall 2006*

Initial cohort: 21,664 students *includes all first-time-ever-in-college WA students, full-time and part-time. Four-Year WA System Success Rates: New Transfer Students Entering WA Comm and Tech Colleges, Fall 2006* by Race/Ethnicity*includes all first-time-ever-in-college WA students, full-time and part-time. Math Progress in WA System: New Transfer Students Entering WA Community and Technical Colleges*Percent Who Completed College-Level Math/Logic Course Two Years After Start, by Pre-College or College-Level Math Enrollment(n=25,393)(n=30,494)*Cohort years 2006, 2007, and 2008 combined.Four-Year WA System Success Rates: New Prof/Technical Students Entering WA Community and Technical Colleges, Fall 2006*Includes all first-time-ever-in-college WA students, full-time and part-time. Earned at least 30 college credits by end of 2nd year: New Prof/Technical Students Entering WA Comm and Technical CollegesPercentage Who Earned 30 College-Level Credits Two Years After Start*Cohort years 2006, 2007, and 2008 combined.Four-Year WA System Success Rates: New Basic Skills Students Entering WA Comm and Tech Colleges, Fall 2006* Initial cohort 14,108 students *includes all first-time-ever-in-college WA students, full-time and part-time. What does this mean in people terms?Of the 21,664 new transfer students who entered a Washington community or technical college in the fall of 2006:

4,343 (20%) earned a tipping point /degree within four years

4,823 (22%) transferred (before earning a degree)

1,239 (6%) were still enrolled in year four at that college

7,824 (36%) made some achievement gains before leavingOf the 14,108 new professional/technical students who entered a Washington community or technical college in the fall of 2006:

3,654 (26%) earned a tipping point (at least one year of college + award) within four years

818 (6%) earned a short certificate (less than one year of college attainment)

714 (5%) were still enrolled in year four at that college

5,854 (41%) made some achievement gains before leaving