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Increasing Higher Education STEM Completion through Untapped Transfer Degrees October 3, 2011 STEMtech. Carol Adukaitis, EdD Director, Pathways for Career Success PA State System of Higher Education. Agenda. 1. Degree-completion does matter 2. Barriers to non-degree completion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Carol Adukaitis, EdD Director, Pathways for Career Success
PA State System of Higher Education
Increasing Higher Education STEM Completion through Untapped Transfer Degrees
October 3, 2011 STEMtech
Agenda
1. Degree-completion does matter 2. Barriers to non-degree completion 3. Strategies for improving degree
completion 4. Successful initiatives that increase
higher education STEM degrees 5. Discussion / Questions
– January 25, 2011 President Barack Obama
• State of the Union Address
“ We need to out-innovate, out-educate, and out-build the rest of the world….America willonce again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.”
Why College Completion Matters
Why College Completion Matters
Lumina Foundation Report (Sept. 2011):
“The consequences of failing to reach the middle class are increasingly severe, and access to middle class jobs is now mostly dependent on completing some form of postsecondary education… College-attainment rates are rising in almost every industrialized or post-industrial country in the world, except for the U.S.”*
By the year 2025, Lumina’s goal is 60 percent of Americans to hold high-quality college degrees and credentials. Nationally, degree-attainment rate is about 38 percent.
Why College Completion Matters
The Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, Help Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements Through 2018 (June 2010):
“by 2018, 63 percent of all jobs will require at least some postsecondary education. Employers will need 22 million new workers with postsecondary degrees… we will fall short by three million workers without a dramatic change. This translates into a deficit of 300,000 college graduates every year between now and 2018.
http://cew.georgetown.edu
Why College Completion MattersSince 1973, jobs that require at least some college have exploded while opportunities
for those with just a high school education have shrunk dramatically
Source: March CPS data, various years, Center on Education and the Workforce, Harvard Study 2011
By 2018, 60% of jobs will require college education and more than half of these positions will only require a certificate or A.A. degree.
Why College Completion Matters in PA
Available Jobs, But Not Enough Educated Workers• Aging workforce facing retirement• Traditional high school population drops by 3
percent from 2007 through 2020• Baby boomers not entering STEM fields• Rapid technological advances in companies
require employees with post-secondary skills
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2011/09/22/
Why Degree Completion Matters in PA
http://www.completecollege.org/docs/Pennsylvania.pdf
Why Degree Completion Matters in PA
http://www.completecollege.org/docs/Pennsylvania.pdf
Almost 16% of Community college students completed a certificate or 2-year degree within 3 years.
Why College Completion Matters in PA• For a strong PA economy, the skills
gap must be closed:
60% By 2020, jobs requiring a skills certificate or college degree
43% PA adults who currently have associate degree or higher
17% skills gap
www.CompleteCollegeAmerica.org; 2011, ‘Time is the Enemy’.
Causes of Non-Degree Completion
Group discussion
What are your top challenges for reaching and retaining non-degree completers at two-year and four-year institutions?
Causes of Non-Degree Completion
1. Inadequate secondary academic preparation for STEM careers2. Poorly designed and/or delivered remediation courses that do
not count toward degree and do not qualify for student financial aid; almost two-thirds of community college students need at least one remedial course
3. Swirling – nearly half of college seniors attending classes from multiple institutions toward degree*
4. Inconsistent or broken credit transfer policies5. Confusing financial aid programs6. A culture that encourages college access not completion7. A system too often out of touch with the needs of today’s
student (P/T, F/T employment, commuters, have family) and the needs of society (need for STEM trained employees)
http://www.completecollege.org/completion_shortfall
Additional causes of PA Non-Degree Completion
PA size, rural
geography and unfinished community college system leave residents in rural areas great distances from low cost campuses.
Strategy: Identify Transfer Populations
• First Generation• Non-traditional
Boomers, Gen X, Millennials• Minority*• Under-represented• Female
Many of the above populations enter post-secondary institutions with a high school diploma and significant work experience
Strategy: Identify Transfer Populations
• Racially• Ethnically • Socially• Economically• High School grad to displaced homemaker• Part time distance learner to full-time resident student• GED completer to certificate seeker to evening MBA
student…..we need a student centered system
The 21st century student is represented
Strategy: College-Ready Preparedness• 59% of community college enrollees must
first take remedial courses to bring them up to the necessary level to begin their course of study
• Only 3-4 out of every 10 community college students referred to remediation actually finish the sequence.
Recommendation: Offer computer-based/self-paced remedial instruction option; embed skills in and throughout coursework
Strategy: Affordability through Articulation• PA is a major center for higher education in the U.S. with
one of the largest systems of higher education and the 4th largest student enrollment in the nation.
• PA public colleges and universities rank as the 6th most expensive state in the nation.
Recommendation: Recognize articulated credits from secondary and post-secondary institutions, dual enrollment courses, credit for Prior Learning Assessments (PLA), military experience that permit students to move from course to course, toward program to program, or one educational level to the next without loss of time or resources.
Source: PA Governor’s Conference on Higher Education, March 2009 www.outreach.psu.edu/programs/governors
Strategy: Promote Certificate Programs
The greater Allentown, Lehigh Valley PA region’s manufacturing employs about 36,000 people at an average wage of $58,432 and added 800 jobs in the last year. Many jobs now require training in high-tech fields such as electromechanical mechatronics and precision machining.
Lehigh Career Technical Institute partnered withLehigh Carbon Community College to open a Centerfor Advance Manufacturing Technology
http://www.mcall.com/business/mc-schnecksville-lcti-manufacturing-20110928,0,6681427.story
Strategy: Develop Statewide PA Transfer• In July 2006, PDE began implementation of Article XX-C of the
Public School Code of 1949 which requires PA’s 14 community colleges and the 14 state-owned universities in the PA State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) to develop and implement equivalency standards for at least 30 hours of foundation courses, not including developmental or remedial courses or career, technical or applied courses, and to accept for transfer up to 30 credits of foundation courses and universities and count toward graduation.
Recommendation: Promote Pennsylvania Transfer and Articulation Center (PA TRAC), a one-stop online portal for transfer students, administrators and advisors/faculty.
https://patrac.org
Strategy: Networking STEM Transfer StudentsPA one of 6 states to receive NGA funding in 2007 to dramatically
increase P-20 students (especially females, minorities, and underrepresented) for careers in STEM
www.pasteminitiative.org
PA STEM Initiative is a collaborative public/private partnership committed to improving and aligning the Commonwealth workforce, education and economic development systems to realize the PA STEM Initiative vision by 2018
To support regional emerging industries compete globally, in 2002, PA Department of Community & Economic Development (DCED) provided funding to develop integrated and seamless educational programs across secondary, two-year and four-year post-secondary programs as a means to create a pipeline of highly-skilled technical STEM workers.
Strategy: Develop 2+2+2 STEM Pathways
www.pathwaysforcareersuccess.org
Strategy: Industry Driven, Articulated CoursesArticulate secondary to post-secondary 2-year and 4-year career
paths in emerging technologies that includes a Guarantee/Warranty*; PSSA proficiency*
2 years high school/ career & technical centers+
2 years of community college+
2 years at baccalaureate level
Develop agile, flexible and responsive training programs for incumbent and transitional workers that lead to a certificate
and/or degree
Strategy: Regional Industry Support
The cornerstone of each regional 2+2+2 Project is an active involvement of economic development agencies:
• Workforce Investment Boards (WIB),• Industrial Resource Centers (IRC),• Private industries, manufacturers
associations
Advanced Manufacturing & Materials Plastics Technology, Electro-optics, Robotics, Mechatronics, Nanofabrication Technology, Applied
Engineering Technology
Biotechnology Pharmaceutical, Biotechnology,
• Energy Natural Gas/ Marcellus Shale Technology
Information Technology Computer Security, Computer Forensics
Strategy: Emerging STEM Sectors Funded
2+2+2 Model= Multiple Entry/ Exit Points
Job
Career
Profession
Livelihood
Career & Technology Center
Community College
AAS Degree
College or UniversityBS Degree
Community CollegeCertificate of Specialization
Strategy: Recruit Transitional/Transfer Students• Did not graduate High School• Graduated High School without skills• Graduated High School, employed,
needing retraining• Graduated Career & Technical School,
needing retooling /upskilling*• Attended some college, no degree• Graduated college, no skills for new
economy (4 + 2)
Strategy: College $avings for prior Learning
Minimum 15 credits articulate from secondary to post-secondary*
Requires ‘Proficient’ or ‘Advanced’ on PSSA Math & Reading to reduce post-secondary remediation coursework
Program encourages community college completion as middle ‘2’ to reduce college costs*
Career guidance integrated at each level to provide students with information about career and technical options and sequencing
BOTSIQ & Robobots = Excitement! Collaboration and Support - PA Labor & Industry - NTMA & AMC2
- 35 Companies: funding & mentors - >75 Organizations & contributors
28
Strategy: Industry/ Education Partnership
Strategy: Marketing STEM Pathways
•Workforce Investment Board•Businesses•Schools•~1,800 Participants•Students & Parents
Hershey Foods needed high tech industrial maintenance technicians for food packaging. Reading Area Community College and Lancaster CTC along with the Lehigh, Berks and Lancaster WIB developed the AMIST curriculum.
RACC’s AAS Program articulates with PA PASSHE institutions and Purdue@Calumet.
3030
Program offers continuous opportunities that recruit females-only, first generation, and underrepresented students to learn about STEM careers. Professional SME/ SWE serve as mentors. University students serving as near-peer mentors.
Strategy: Recruiting Underserved Groups
Kelly Reid, DCCC AET, President, SME Student Chapter, now enrolled at Drexel
IndustryProgramsCompanies like Sunoco, Inc, offer students ‘earn and learn’ opportunities; provide mentoring with professional organizations (SME/SWE), job shadowing, and apprenticeship programs. Companies also provide ‘educator in the workplace’ opportunities to produce STEM-capable teachers.
Strategy: Industry Grows Their Workforce
Are They Really Ready to Work, The Partnership for 21st Century Skills
Employer Surveys of Program Graduates
Are They Really Ready to Work, The Partnership for 21st Century Skills
Employer Surveys of Program Graduates
Statewide Career Pathways ImpactGraduated over 7,000 students*Network Involves
40 Career & Technology Centers, 39 high schools
7 community colleges, 2 two-year colleges
29 four-year colleges / universities
• Salaries reported:• AAS Degree of $33,500+• BS Degree Technician of $65,000+
Project funds Leveraged:
partial listing of supporters 2003 - 2011
$21,636,753
• US DOL Grants, AET, Biotechnology
• NSF-ATE, Advanced Manufacturing, Plastics, Biomanufacturing
• Community Based Job Training• Department of Defense• Carnegie Mellon University Robo Corridor• National Tool and Machining Foundation• R. K. Mellon Foundation• Heinz Foundation• Westmoreland Foundation• Whitaker Foundation• Society of Photonics Engineers• Society of Manufacturing Engineers-Education
Foundation• US Congressman Paul Kanjorski & US Senator Robert
Casey• US Senator Arlen Specter• Collegiate Consortium for Workforce & Economic
Development• Exelon• Many others……
Statewide Program ImpactStatewide Collaboration = Leveraged Funds
Curriculum is industry-driven and has academic integrity.
Articulation course to course is successful Program to program alignment is in progress (Perkins
Programs of Study)* Dual enrollment courses offer portability of credits for
students choosing institutions other than those in the partnership
Assessment is on-going 2+2+2 supports national & state Complete College
America goal
What We Have Learned
Increase Career guidance & counseling for recruiting young adults and transfers
Improving perceptions CTE and CCOffer more on-line coursesSTEM awareness must begin K-6 with students
and professional development with facultyPASSHE undertaking a comprehensive review of
transfer system-wide task force for policies, business practices and culture.
What We Have Learned
Harvard Study: Pathways to Prosperity 2011 suggests…• Current educational system places to much emphasis on
‘one-size-fits-all’ 4-year degree• Multiple pathways to middle skill occupations include industry
certificate or associate degree
• Provide contextual & applied learning
• Expand the role of Employers• Multiple pathways to middle skill occupations include industry certificate or
associate degree
• Provide more aid & assistance to students to complete college
• Improve Math and Literacy skills
http://dailyitem.com0100_news/Harvard-Study-Students-need-more-paths-to-career-success
For more information contact:
Carol Adukaitis, EdDDirector, Pathways for Career SuccessPA State System of Higher EducationDixon University Center2986 North 2nd StreetHarrisburg, PA 17110Phone: [email protected]
PathwaysForCareerSuccess.org