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The Hard Truth About Soft Skills College Success Foundation DC

The Hard Truth About Soft Skills College Success Foundation DC. Panel for Today. Kya N. Dixon, MS Senior Program Officer, College Programs Kevin Mungin, MA Senior Program Officer, HERO Program Nicole E. Smith, MSEd Senior Program Officer, School Programs.

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The Hard Truth About Soft Skills College Success Foundation DC

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  1. The Hard Truth About Soft Skills College Success Foundation DC

  2. Panel for Today Kya N. Dixon, MS Senior Program Officer, College Programs Kevin Mungin, MA Senior Program Officer, HERO Program Nicole E. Smith, MSEd Senior Program Officer, School Programs

  3. College Success Foundation DC :Who Are We?

  4. Who Are Our Students? • Families must be considered Pell eligible to apply • Mostly first-generation college-bound students • 96% qualify for free or reduced lunch • 99% African American • Average GPA 2.6 • Many do not live with a biological parent • Many are significantly underprepared for college level work

  5. Environment Supportive People Culture and Background Strengths Based Approach Culture of Accountability via teamwork

  6. Strictly the Numbers….

  7. Student Profile • Family: 1 of 6 • 100% Pell Eligible • Parents never married • Incarcerated at age 14 • Muslim • 2.7 GPA (no honors/2 AP classes) • 750/800 SAT • Interest: sports management • Participated in OUDC • Applied to Morehouse, Penn State, University of Delaware, UCONN, Frostburg, UDC, Delaware State, Lincoln University (PA) How would you advise this student?

  8. Questions to Consider: • What is your overall feeling about this student? • What conversations/advice would you have concerning the schools the student would like to apply to? • How would you advise the student in the following areas: • Financial • Academic • Social Emotional • Cultural • Racial • What do you feel are the students strengths and areas of concern/weakness?

  9. Snapshot of School Profiles

  10. Foundational Research Non-Cogs/ 21st Century Skills Counseling Theories Culturally Sensitive Research Intelligences Student Development Theory • Bloom, Hutson & Ye • Appreciative Advising • Carl Rogers • Humanistic • Theory • William Glasser • Choice Theory • Sternberg Triarchic Theory • Gardner Multiple Intelliences • Reuven Bar-On EQi • Donald O. Clifton Strengths Finder • Sedlacek • 8 Areas • Duckworth • Grit & Self - • Discipline • William E. Cross • People of Color Identity Model • Theresa LaFromboise • Cultural Acquisition • Reisser & Chickering • Identity • Development • Tinto • Retention Theory • Perry • Ethical & Intellectual Development

  11. Non-Cognitive Factors

  12. 21st Century Skills

  13. Duckworth: Grit and Self-Discipline

  14. Will Smith

  15. Will Smith The only thing that I see that is distinctly different about me is I'm not afraid to die on a treadmill. I will not be out-worked, period. You might have more talent than me, you might be smarter than me, you might be sexier than me, you might be all of those things you got it on me in nine categories. But if we get on the treadmill together, there's two things: You're getting off first, or I'm going to die. It's really that simple, right? You're not going to out-work me. It's such a simple, basic concept. The guy who is willing to hustle the most is going to be the guy that just gets that loose ball. The majority of people who aren't getting the places they want or aren't achieving the things that they want in this business is strictly based on hustle. It's strictly based on being out-worked; it's strictly based on missing crucial opportunities. I say all the time if you stay ready, you ain'tgotta get ready.

  16. Counseling Theories: Appreciative Advising Make a positive first impression with the student, build rapport, and create a safe, welcoming space. Ask positive open-ended questions that help advisers learn about students' strengths, skills, and abilities. Co-create a plan for making their dreams a reality. Inquire about students' hopes and dreams for their futures. Advisers and students alike need to set their own internal bars of expectations high The student delivers on the plan created during the Design phase and the adviser is available to encourage and support students.

  17. Counseling Theories: Carl RogersHumanistic Theory

  18. Counseling Theories: William Glasser

  19. Culturally Sensitive Research LaFromboise • Assimilation Model • Acculturation Model • Alternation Model • Multicultural Model • Fusion Model “Melting Pot” Cross • Pre-Encounter Stage • Encounter Stage • Immersion/Emersion Stage • Internalization Stage • Internalization Commitment Stage

  20. Intelligences: SternbergTriarchic Theory • 3 types of intelligence • All people have all 3 to some degree • Most people are stronger in one type than the others • Intelligence is trainable • Intelligence is affected by and related to culture

  21. Intelligences: Gardner

  22. Intelligences: Bar-On EQi

  23. Intelligences: Clifton StrengthsFinder

  24. Student Development Theories:TintoRetention Theory

  25. Readvise

  26. Questions to Consider: • What is your overall feeling about this student? • What conversations/advice would you have concerning the schools the student would like to apply to? • How would you advise the student in the following areas: • Financial • Academic • Social Emotional • Cultural • Racial • What do you feel are the students strengths and areas of concern/weakness?

  27. CSF Good Math • 83% of HERO participants receive the Achievers Scholarship • 99% HS Graduation Rate • 85% of Achievers enroll in college the first semester immediately after graduating from high school • 28% College Graduation Rate compared to 3% in Wards 7 and 8

  28. Be the Role Model

  29. Be Naked.

  30. Be Encouraging and Corrective.

  31. Be the Cheerleader

  32. Strictly the Numbers….

  33. “ The question is not whether we can afford to invest in every child; it is whether we can afford NOT to.” ~ Marion Wright Edelman. Founder & President. Children’s Defense Fund

  34. Like us? Love us? Want more? Feel free to contact us: Kevin Mungin kmungin@collegesuccessfoundation.org Kya Dixon kdixon@collegesuccessfoundation.org Nicole E. Smith nsmith@collegesuccessfoundation.org

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