Mobile App Security

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 4 March 2013

Associate Degree for Transfer program aids CSU

Posted on 22:06 by Unknown
Nanette Asimov, SFGate
Published 10:47 pm, Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Jeffrey Fang helped in planning sessions for the program last year while representing City College of S.F. Photo: Michael Short, Special To The Chronicle
Jeffrey Fang helped in planning sessions for the program last year while representing City College of S.F. Photo: Michael Short, Special To The Chronicle


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/education/article/Associate-Degree-for-Transfer-program-aids-CSU-4295877.php#ixzz2Mdu2maE9It's not often that bureaucracy gets reversed.
But the tangled, expensive and highly irritating system by which students transfer from community colleges to a California State University is quickly becoming less tangled, less expensive and far less irritating than it used to be.
And students are figuring that out.
This spring, 2,000 community college students applying to CSU from across the state will be guaranteed admission as juniors because they enrolled in a new and expanding community college program called Associate Degree for Transfer. Those students will enter CSU with a two-year degree, 60 transferable units, priority placement into the university classes they need - and a promise that they will not be forced to go back and retake community college classes because some CSU campus randomly decided the lower-division course didn't meet its standards.
Interest is soaring. Seventeen times as many students will earn the degree this spring compared with last spring, when just 120 did so, although this year's 2,000 are still just 4 percent of the 50,000 students who transfer from community colleges each year.
"I'm the first to admit this is a small number given the size of our system - but it's just the beginning," said Erik Skinner, executive vice chancellor for the California Community College system. "We've made tremendous progress."
Having to retake classes has been one of students' most hair-yanking frustrations with California's transfer system. Programs from art history to psychology all have had different requirements, depending on which of the 112 community colleges a student happened to attend. And the state's 23 CSU campuses have also varied in their willingness to accept the classes - often sending students back to bolster their preparation.

Sorting things out

All that red tape, plus confusion about what is required to transfer and the inability to enroll in necessary classes because of overcrowding, has contributed to a dropout rate of 60 percent, according to the Institute for Higher Education Leadership & Policy in Sacramento. And those who don't drop out often find themselves floundering for years in what is supposed to be a two-year community college program and taking far more than the 60 units required for transfer.
Now a quiet revolution is changing this costly, bureaucratic morass.
It began with a law in September 2010 that mandated the creation of an Associate Degree for Transfer so students with a C average or better would be guaranteed a place within the CSU system.
But if CSU simply opened its doors to every student with 60 college credits, the result "could have been worse than before," Skinner said, because of the varying quality of the college programs.
Then, he said, "a brilliant solution came from faculty."

A fresh strategy

Community college and CSU faculty met for a year and agreed on curricula that would satisfy them both, creating templates for what community college instructors should teach in each academic program.
"So when the student gets to San Francisco State, the faculty know exactly what the students have taken and, maybe, what they haven't," said Jane Patton, the immediate past president of the community college system's Academic Senate, which organized the new approach. "It didn't mean there would be no flexibility for instructors, but we wanted to curtail the wide range" of quality.

Few problems

Fears about the loss of academic freedom had been a reason that such standardization - including uniform course identification numbers across all community colleges - had never been achieved.
Education leaders estimate that as the transfer program takes hold, it will clear out space for some 40,000 more students to enroll in community colleges, and for 14,000 more students to enroll in CSU.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/education/article/Associate-Degree-for-Transfer-program-aids-CSU-4295877.php#ixzz2MdtwvlSfFaculty have already developed curriculum for the 22 most popular academic programs, which transfer nearly 80 percent of students. No college offers all of them. But every college offers at least two, and some have more than 10. City College of San Francisco offers three: English, psychology and communication. College of San Mateo offers 11, including kinesiology, geology, math and studio arts.

By the fall, colleges will have to offer transfer degrees in 80 percent of the academic programs approved under the new system, according to state law. And by fall 2014, the degree must be offered in every eligible program.

"We need to get the word out about this," said Ken O'Donnell, senior director of student engagement at CSU. "A lot of people who stand to benefit are the first in their family to come to college. But it's hard to explain to them, and it gets jargony in a hurry."

Getting the word out


So the community college system created a simple, multicolored website: www.adegreewithaguarantee.com. The site lets students choose an associate degree program, find the colleges that offer it, and see exactly what courses they'll need to earn the degree and transfer with 60 credits in two years.

Jeffrey Fang will have about 80 credits by the time he leaves City College of San Francisco this spring after five years. Fang sat in on planning meetings for the transfer program last year while representing his school on the Student Senate for California Community Colleges.

"I would have liked that program," said Fang, who hopes to become a lawyer and is waiting to hear if he's been accepted to San Francisco State and San Jose State.

At the same time, "my major is philosophy, and that's not a degree that's been approved," he said. "I'm not holding my breath. But I would have been very interested in looking at what it would do for me."

But fellow philosophy majors shouldn't worry about holding their breath. The latest program just approved for the transfer degree?

Philosophy.

The program

To check out the Associate Degree for Transfer program, visit www.adegreewithaguarantee.com.

Nanette Asimov is a San Francisco Chronicle reporter. E-mail: nasimov@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @NanetteAsimov


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/education/article/Associate-Degree-for-Transfer-program-aids-CSU-4295877.php#ixzz2Mdth4yr3
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in CTE, ICT Education, ICT pathways, James Jones | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • LearningWorks: THE MISSING PIECE: Quantifying Non-Completion Pathways to Success
    ” . . . in the California Community College system . . . nearly one-third of students took an average of just two courses over about two yea...
  • Cisco Career Certifications Awarded American National Standards Institute Accreditation
    Achievement Demonstrates Compliance With Rigorous, Internationally Recognized Standards SAN JOSE, CA--(Marketwire - Jan 16, 2013) - Unders...
  • CyberWatch West Free Student 2 Student Webinar October 30th
    Online Workshop Oct 30 at 10:30 am PDT Man-in-the-Middle Attacks Using Mobile Devices Register @ cyberwatchwest.webex.com Student 2 Student ...
  • Spring 2013 NEW CCCApply Webinar Series
      Monday, 28 January 2013, TechEDge Written by Tim Calhoon Saturday, 26 January 2013 The New CCCApply online admissions application...
  • Community college grads out-earn bachelor's degree holders
    By Jon Marcus at The Hechinger Institute @CNNMoney February 26, 2013: 6:23 AM ET Nearly 30% of Americans with associate's degrees now ...
  • ACM CCECC Alice Summer Workshops Registration now open
    Registration has opened for the Alice Summer Workshops! A week has been set aside for a Community College focused workshop at Walt Disn...
  • CA Career Cafe: CALJOBS Job Search Service Now Available
    “ Somewhere someone is looking for exactly what you have to offer. ”                                                                    - ...
  • Code.org Launches To Help Make Computer Programming Accessible To Everyone
    Drew Olanoff ,  TechCrunch       Drew Olanoff has over 10 years of marketing, PR, customer service and support, relationship buildin...
  • EDGE goals addressed in 2013-14 California State Budget
    California's 2013-14 State Budget and an accompanying trailer bill, AB 86, address key EDGE goals of 1) beginning to restore dedicated f...
  • NCRIC Cyber Internship Program
    Northern California Regional Intelligence Center Cyber Internship Program Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (“NCRIC”) Mission...

Categories

  • Big Data
  • CATV
  • CENIC
  • Certifications
  • Cloud
  • Computational Thinking
  • Computer Engineering
  • Computer Science
  • CTE
  • Database
  • Digital Divide
  • Digital Literacy
  • Digital Media
  • Diversity
  • Educational Technology
  • elearning
  • Electronics
  • Entrepreneur
  • ethics
  • funding opportunity
  • Gaming
  • GIS
  • Grants
  • Hacking
  • Healthcare IT
  • ICT Applications
  • ICT Core Competencies
  • ICT Education
  • ICT Infrastructure
  • ICT Jobs
  • ICT pathways
  • ICT Regulation
  • ICT Research
  • Industry News
  • Innovation
  • Internships
  • James Jones
  • K-12
  • law
  • Linux
  • Mobility
  • MOOC
  • MPICT Announcements
  • Multimedia
  • Networking
  • networking security
  • Olivia Herriford
  • Open Source
  • Operating Systems
  • Pierre Thiry
  • Piracy
  • Public Policy
  • Security
  • Security; Identity Management
  • Smart Grid
  • Social Media
  • Soft Skills
  • Software Assurance
  • Software Engineering
  • Spanish
  • STEM Education
  • Storage
  • Teaching and Learning
  • Telecom
  • Tools
  • virtualization
  • Web
  • WIB
  • Wireless
  • women
  • Women in ICT
  • Workforce Development

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (418)
    • ►  November (41)
    • ►  October (53)
    • ►  September (44)
    • ►  August (21)
    • ►  July (30)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ►  May (43)
    • ►  April (43)
    • ▼  March (35)
      • Bitcoin miners hit back at cyber-thieves
      • Higher Ed Web Professional Educator Webinar Series
      • CompTIA Advanced Security Practitioner certificati...
      • Icann launches brand database for trademarks
      • Global internet slows after 'biggest attack in his...
      • CompTIA A+ Certification Marks 20th Anniversary
      • @One Tech Training Survey
      • ACM CCECC Alice Summer Workshops Registration now ...
      • Video: Sunne Wright McPeak discusses digital divid...
      • Coming soon - an online community for the nation's...
      • Who Has The Fastest LTE Service?
      • Steinberg Unveils Measure to Enhance Industry and ...
      • Gender gap? In tech salaries, it's all gone, Dice ...
      • Cisco Networking Academy: Share and Win an iPad M...
      • CareerCafe.com Announces Free Job Portal in Partne...
      • NPD: US homes now hold over 500m Internet-connecte...
      • CA Career Briefs: Practice Presenting
      • CSSIA Newsletter and FREE ICT Faculty Training Opp...
      • K-12 College Board AP CS Principles Opportunity
      • Literacy 2.0: The Dawn of National Digital Literac...
      • Netflix to Stream 4K Content In a 'Year or Two'
      • MEDIA CAREER TIPS: LUCKY 13
      • Internships become the new job requirement
      • California Bill Seeks Campus Credit for Online Study
      • Washington House votes to count computer science f...
      • eAlert: Deputy Sector Navigator Package Grant
      • Torlakson Announces California Joins National Part...
      • The Professors’ Big Stage
      • Attitude is the Cause of 89% of New Hire Failures
      • State of California to launch new, redesigned onli...
      • CTE Employment Outcomes Survey will be a boost for...
      • Health providers can't find, keep IT staff
      • Associate Degree for Transfer program aids CSU
      • San Jose State Cyber Day Camp April 6th
      • How AT&T Is Planning to Rob Americans of an Open P...
    • ►  February (43)
    • ►  January (37)
  • ►  2012 (82)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (40)
    • ►  October (17)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile