1 / 24

Perkins Grant’s Early Intervention System

Perkins Grant’s Early Intervention System. Achieving the Dream Summit January 12, 2007. Presented by Norm Downey. What is the Perkins Grant?. Federal Grant of $1.2 million designed to assist Career and Technical Education (CTE) students

lei
Télécharger la présentation

Perkins Grant’s Early Intervention System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Perkins Grant’s Early Intervention System Achieving the Dream Summit January 12, 2007 Presented by Norm Downey

  2. What is the Perkins Grant? • Federal Grant of $1.2 million designed to assist Career and Technical Education (CTE) students • The Perkins Grant is part of the Center for Learning, which is under the direction of Dr. Charles Blocksidge

  3. What does Perkins do at CCAC? • Perkins Employees • 33 full and part-time staff members who provide student services • Only 17 of these staff members work, in part, on Early Intervention • In fiscal year 2006/2007 Perkins provided: • Over $300K for Supportive Services to work with disabled and special population students • Over $250K for equipment in FY 06/07

  4. What are Perkins Goals? Improve CTE Students: • QPAs • Graduation rates • Retention • Completion • Job placement rates

  5. Purpose of Early Intervention • Assist in retaining CTE students who are experiencing difficulty in the classroom by: • Connecting students with college resources such as: • Tutoring, • Financial Aid, • Advising • Providing support for faculty

  6. Three Parts of Early Intervention • Faculty input via the World Wide Web • Retrieval of faculty referrals through CCAC’s database system (Datatel, Colleague) • Tracking and reporting EI data and results via the EI database

  7. Accessing Early Intervention

  8. What happens to your referral? • Referrals are retrieved from Datatel by a Career Support Specialists • Entered in a tracking database • The Career Support Specialist attempts to contact the students via phone, mail and e-mail

  9. When students respond • Options to improve student’s academic performance are discussed • The student may be referred to other campus resources such as: • Tutoring or Facilitated Studies • Supportive Services • Financial Aid • Career Services • Registration or Advising • The student may be informed of the withdrawal process and deadline if necessary

  10. Some Students Don’t Respond • Sometimes student contact information in Datatel is inaccurate • Some students can never be reached or simply choose not to respond • Those students who cannot be contacted or who do not respond have an increased chance of failure

  11. Feedback to Faculty • Referring faculty member is notified of the progress of the referral by the Perkins Career Support Specialists • Depending on the situation the instructor may receive this information for each student separately or as a class • The CSS may contact the faculty for assistance in helping the student

  12. EI Success vs. Failure Defined • Success = Final letter grade of A, B, C or W • W grades are considered success since they do not adversely impact a student’s QPA • Failure = Final letter grade of D or F • I are grades dismissed as inconclusive • Only referred students are tracked

  13. EI Outcomes Matrix

  14. Notes on EI Outcomes Matrix • Students can either achieve success or failure as defined previously • Students can either respond or not respond to Early Intervention • This matrix tracks referrals not students and therefore an individual student can appear in more than one outcome cell • Statistics from Fall 2006

  15. Success vs. Failure Matrix

  16. Stopping the Slide:Referrals and Responses Both Up After 06FA

  17. EI’s Limitations • Staffing – 17 staff, 14 of which are part-time handle EI referrals • CTE Students only • Only  of referrals received by third week of term • Perkins & Early Intervention serves primarily as a contact point and referral source for students

  18. 06FA Faculty Survey • 788 surveys sent via e-mail to CCAC faculty who taught in 06FA • 318 Read the e-mail • 157 Deleted e-mail without reading it • Only 32 Faculty members responded

  19. Faculty Comments from Survey • “If you want faculty to use the system, there should be more people on the other end to help the students.”

  20. Faculty Comments from Survey • “The institution needs to have an organized retention program that is also well funded.”

  21. Faculty Comments from Survey • “The online system has been greatly improved. It's the one-on-one student contact that needs more improvement in order for this system to be effective.”

  22. Keeping EI Visible • Continue marketing • Flyers • Webpage • Reminder e-mails • Personal Touch • Individual success stories • Faculty survey

  23. Perkins Grant on the Web • For information on the Online Early Intervention System go to www.ccac.edu and search for “Early Intervention” • For general Perkins Grant information including campus contact information, go to www.ccac.edu and search for “Perkins Grant”

  24. Contact Information Norm Downey ndowney@ccac.edu (412) 237-8192

More Related