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Basic Skills, Bridges, and Career Pathways -- The Wisconsin RISE Initiative

Basic Skills, Bridges, and Career Pathways -- The Wisconsin RISE Initiative. Mark Johnson Wisconsin Technical College System. Today’s Presentation. RISE Overview Career Pathways and Bridges Bridge Types and Characteristics Questions & Discussion. Wisconsin’s Challenge.

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Basic Skills, Bridges, and Career Pathways -- The Wisconsin RISE Initiative

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  1. Basic Skills, Bridges, and Career Pathways -- The Wisconsin RISE Initiative Mark JohnsonWisconsin Technical College System

  2. Today’s Presentation • RISE Overview • Career Pathways and Bridges • Bridge Types and Characteristics • Questions & Discussion

  3. Wisconsin’s Challenge • Good jobs and skilled workforce to build wealth for communities, workers, and companies • Predictable, reliable, relevant & realistic ways for lower-skill adults to get more education and job skills • Employers, educators, and workforce organizations working together to connect education, good-paying jobs, and reliable supply of skilled workers.

  4. Wisconsin’s “Workforce of Tomorrow” is in the Workforce Today

  5. The Wisconsin RISE Target Population -- 2010 Total number of adults (ages 25-54) who have no 2 or 4 year college credential and/or speak English “not well” or “not at all” 1.4 million Total number of those adults who worked last year 1.2 million Total number of those working adults with wages under $9.60 per hour* 337,000 Total number of those working adults with wages between $9.60 and $15.38 per hour 372,000 Total RISE target population: working adults with low wages (less than $15.38) 710,000 Developed by the Center on Wisconsin Strategy for RISE

  6. Two Structural Elements of RISE -- Postsecondary career pathway curriculathat chunk WTCS diploma or degree programs into certificates associated with career advancement opportunities -- Career pathway bridge curriculaemploying contextualized learning to accelerate the transitions of ABE/ELL learners to postsecondary occupational education.

  7. Career Pathways

  8. Bridges 2 years Postsecondary 1 year Lakeshore TC Pre-Tech Contextualized Math and Reading combined with Work-Certified. Earns 1 credit for Industrial Maintenance, Machine Tool, and Welding. Bypasses Accuplacer. Waukesha County TC Contextualized, team-taught ABE/ELL modules in health care, culinary arts, welding, business. Below Postsecondary

  9. 2 years Postsecondary 1 year FVTC Accounting Career Pathway Accounting contextualized ABE Certificate (3 college credits), leads to an Accounting certificate and beyond. Madison College ELL/CNA 3 credits of concurrent ELL support. After CNA students can matriculate into other certificates or nursing sequence Below Postsecondary

  10. 2 years Postsecondary 1 year MPTC Baking/Culinary 7 and 6 credit certificates, leading to the two-year degree. 3 credits of ABE/ELL support CVTC RISE Welding 9 credit entry Point into 1-year TD 3 credits of ABE support Below Postsecondary

  11. 2 years Postsecondary 1 year NTC ELL/CNA 3 credits of ELL support for CNA, After CNA students can matriculate into other certificates or nursing sequence WTC CNC Machinist Three 6-credit stacked certificates with job exit points. 3 credits of integrated ABE support Below Postsecondary

  12. 1 year CNC Programmer Postsecondary CNC Set-up Set Up CNC Set-up Operator ABE WTC CNC Machinist

  13. Manufacturing Math 1 Postsecondary Manufacturing Math 1 – 1 Credit Blueprint Reading – 1 Credit Measurement and Inspection – 1 Credit Introduction to Machining – 1 Credit CNC Production Lathe: Operation – 1 Credit CNC Production Mill: Operation – 1 Credit ABE Math (CNC Pathway) NRS 5 -- 2 Credits ABE Reading and Study Skills – 1 Credit WTC CNC Machinist

  14. Achieving a High School Credential As An Integral Part Of A Career Pathway Bridge • HSED 5.10

  15. Other Bridge Models • Integrated Developmental and LPN at Blackhawk • Integrated ELL and General Ed at FVTC • Math/Reading/Science Bridge at Madison College

  16. Bridging ELL Students Into Postsecondary Programs – A Promising Model Fox Valley Technical College became frustrated with the lack of success of ELL students who wanted to transition into Associate Degree programs at the college. The Associate Degree in the WTCS requires completion of General Education classes in addition to the program classes, and ELL students were not doing well in completing these classes.

  17. Fox Valley Technical College also wanted to address key skill areas for ELL students that were troublesome . . . • Critical thinking skills • Confidence • Reading skills in genre • Writing and using various rhetorical styles • Research skills • Academic etiquette, e.g. absences, behavior, missing homework, asking for help, group work, testing, plagiarism, etc.

  18. They had tried different bridge models . . . • Preparatory workshops and courses • Simultaneous Instruction • Shadowing targeted courses • They decided to try an IBEST approach . . . • Integrated and team-taught General Education Courses • Written Communication • Oral/Interpersonal Communication

  19. A variety of students • International IEP • Community residents, e.g. immigrants • 20 countries • TOEFL range of 400-500

  20. The Bridge Approach • Two Instructors • General Studies faculty • ELL faculty • Integrated classes of native and non-native speakers of English • Supplemental support class • Preview and review of lessons • Pronunciation • Grammar and vocabulary • Personalized attention

  21. Benefits for ELL Students • Access to two instructors • Interaction with native speakers • One on One attention • Cross cultural experience • Insight into target language and American society • Continued support from day one • Confidence building

  22. Benefits for American Students • Access to two instructors • Cross cultural experience • Insight into different customs and cultures • Improved communication skills • Learn how to interact with various populations • Learn how to negotiate meaning and messages

  23. Pros of Bridge Classes • “Two Heads are Better than One” • Camaraderie between instructors • Global village environment • Strong rapport between students and teachers • Student centered classes • ‘Adoption’ of ELL students • Low attrition

  24. Cons of Bridge Class • “Two Heads are not Better than One” • Potential for stress • Intimidation • Cultural misunderstandings • Lowering the academic bar • Threat of preferential treatment • Assessment • Time • Deadlines

  25. Statistical Results From Fall 2008 to Fall 2009: 28 students (100%) passed these bridged General Education classes and 19 (68%) enrolled in additional postsecondary courses 11 of the 19 (58%) enrolled in an AAS, TD, or Certificate programs 105 postsecondary courses were taken by these students o A’s = 59 o B’s = 21 o C’s = 13 o D’s = 3 o F’s = 0 o EX = 1 o W = 8

  26. Future of the Approach • Business Math (another Gen Ed) • Printing • eSEED (Entrepreneurship Training) • Nursing • Welding

  27. Training Content Instructors English Language Learning (ELL) Adjustments • Limit use of slang and informal style • Be careful of sarcasm or "kidding" when working directly with ELL students • Allow plenty of wait time when asking questions • Ask only one question at a time, and wait for response • Slow your speed of speech and try to help students hear word borders and phrases • Provide definitions of key terms (hand-out or write on board). It is very helpful to see and hear words • Organize presentation of new topics with introduction and summary • Careful of "over-paraphrasing" • Do not speak louder to be understood • Remember that it is easier to understand for most people if they can see someone's mouth and body

  28. Madison College -- Combining Developmental Math and Reading with College Chemistry • Traditionally students can only take General Chemistry if they had a Compass Algebra score of 30+ or completed a 1 – 3 semester sequence of developmental math courses • Students with satisfactory math skills still struggle with General Chemistry • Bridge was developed to minimize remediation time and align necessary math with the chemistry

  29. What is the Math Science Bridge? • Joins together a new Applied Math for Chemistry developmental course and a new Applied Reading for Chemistry developmental course with General Chemistry • Enables students to complete this coursework within one semester • New math and reading course are specially linked to and aligned with the content in the college chemistry course

  30. Who Qualifies ? • Students with a Pre Algebra Compass Score of at least 30 (this level assumes competent in math concepts) • Students who need to take general chemistry to satisfy admission requirements for their intended training program • Students with a Algebra Compass of 30/40+ and Reading Compass of 75+ are eligible to take any General Chemistry Course and would NOT need to take the bridge

  31. Early Signs of Bridge Success • 46 Students have completed the courses • All Students increased their Math and/or Reading competencies over the course of the semester • 41 out of the 46 students passed college-level General Chemistry with a C or better • Pass rate of the Science Math Bridge is higher than pass rate of traditional General Chemistry rate. • Remember: none of these students had scored high enough on their assessment tests to take general chemistry

  32. Student Feedback (What Worked?) • Students reported benefitting from: • Three great teachers (learned from different angles, more pressure to do well) • Concurrent and applied basic skills instruction (esp. math) reinforced learning in Chemistry • Being part of a cohort (“the best part of this whole experience”)

  33. More Information: • Case Studies on Five Bridges in Wisconsin • Building Bridges in Wisconsin: Connecting Working Adults with College Credentials and Career AdvancementJessa Lewis Valentine, Adrienne Pagac, COWS, May 2010, at www.cows.org Welding - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SgGw4oN4cE Instructional Assistant (online) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-MoM7ALfBg Culinary Arts - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0Swcj2s4FA Integrated ABE/ELL/Occupational Teacher and Student Interviews Mark Johnson Wisconsin Technical College System mark.johnson@wtcsystem.edu 608.266.1272

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