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PHILADELPHIA-- In a significant recognition of their transformative efforts in higher education, Chattanooga State CommunityCollege and Southwestern Oregon CommunityCollege have been awarded the prestigious Leah Meyer Austin Award by Achieving the Dream (ATD). The college saw an 8.7 Dr. Karen A.
Steven Gonzales Communitycolleges have a reputation for being leaders in workforce training. With strong ties to local business and industry, Maricopa CommunityColleges are leading the way with industry-aligned bachelors degrees. In 2021, Arizona communitycolleges received approval to offer baccalaureate degrees.
The University of Illinois System and nonprofit organization One Million Degrees have announced a new multiyear initiative to increase communitycollege transfer rates, with a particular focus on first-generation and low-income students in Illinois. in the past year, significant gaps remain.
Our institutions differ in many ways one of us leads a communitycollege in Californias agricultural heartland of San Joaquin Valley; the other serves as President of Frank Wu an urban college in the most diverse borough of New York City. Queens is the most diverse borough in one of the most diverse cities in the world.
According to LeiLani, When learning is personalized and can be done anywhere, continued relevancy for schools will rely on providing what the present generation values the mostquality experience. Interestingly, at the CommunityCollege of Aurora, over 40% of our learners identify as adult learners.
Brigid Flanigan The Portland CommunityCollege Foundation has received a $1 million gift pledge to launch the college’sFirst-Year Experience initiative, benefitting historically underserved students. The gift was made by Tenfold Senior Living founder and principal Brigid Flanigan.
“When I first met with my advisor, I was excited to dive into my program,” says Maria, a first-generationcommunitycollegestudent. But when I realized there was no pre-college math course to take, I panicked. I had always struggled with math. I thought, ‘How am I going to pass this class?’”
Mott CommunityCollege (MCC) has received $156,000 to implement an initiative aimed at better supporting immigrant, refugee, and first-generationstudents, The County Press reported. Mott CommunityCollege MCC’s initiative is called Pathways to Success: Empowering Immigrant Futures (EIF).
A new report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center (NSCRC) n otes that 61.1% of learners who began college in fall 2018, which is the most recent cohort tracked, earned a credential within six years. 5 percentage point increase is the first increase in the six-year completion rate in several years.
Pima CommunityCollege has received nearly $1.5 Department of Education (ED), which it will use to serve low-income and first-generationstudents interested in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) degrees from select high schools. million from the U.S.
It’s not an everyday occurrence when a communitycollege leader gets a phone call telling them their institution will receive an influx of funding in the millions. when MacKenzie Scott, one of the richest women in the world, decided to make a major investment in communitycolleges.
Across the country, communitycolleges and universities are seeing fewer students enroll, a trend that could have long-term consequences for both individuals and the economy. The number of traditional college-age students is steadily declining, with fewer high school graduates enrolling in higher education.
Dr. Romn Liera is a rising star in higher education, with a dedication to equity, innovative scholarship and student-centered learni Dr. Romn Liera ning. Liera then transferred to San Diego State, and although his overall experience was positive, it was his first time in an environment with so many white students.
After two years of COVID-19, communitycollege enrollment was in triage. Indian River State College (IRSC) in Fort Pierce, FL, and Coahoma CommunityCollege (CCC) in Clarksdale, MS, saw their efforts to rebuild their student populations pay off. Dr. Timothy Moore, president of Indian River State College.
Gonzales’ passion for education has culminated in a swift rise to being named chancellor of the Maricopa County CommunityCollege District (MCCCD) last September. The district comprises 10 independently accredited colleges in Arizona serving over 94,000 students. A passion for education Dr. Steven R.
Over half of Asian students and nearly 40% of white students earn a college degree within eight years of high school graduation, while less than 20% of low-income, Black, or Latinx students reach the same milestone. The data shows stark disparities in educational attainment among recent high school graduates.
But like other free tuition initiatives for Native American students, it’s not quite as simple as it sounds. While this is not a program specific to Native Americans, the state’s four tribal colleges are eligible institutions along with Minnesota State Colleges and Universities and all University of Minnesota campuses. “One
David Doré will become chancellor of the Virginia CommunityCollege System (VCCS), effective Apr. Dr. David Doré Doré is currently president of campuses and executive vice chancellor for student experience and workforce development at Pima CommunityCollege.
In 2022, student leaders launched a campaign to challenge the long-standing stigma associated with attending communitycolleges. To overcome negative stereotypes, the CCSmart advocacy campaign tells the stories of students’ educational journeys and the positive impact communitycolleges had on their lives.
Kelli Sims Butler The California CommunityCollege System consists of 116 institutions with over 1.8 million students. In the system, there are 140 CommunityCollege Chief Executive Officers (CEO). Of the current 140 chancellors and college presidents, 63 are female, and 12 identify as Black females.
Brown, is to advance Latino student success in higher education by promoting Latino student achievement, conducting analysis to inform educational policies and advancing institutional practices. There must be deliberate and continuous assessment to identify and implement strategies that improve Latino student achievement.
Marta Yera Cronin will become president of Delaware County CommunityCollege (DCCC), making her the second woman and the first Latina to lead the school. Dr. Marta Cronin Cronin – a first-generationcollegestudent born of immigrant parents – is currently president of Columbia Gorge CommunityCollege.
Courtney Adkins The beginning of the fall academic term brings to mind images of freshly graduated high school students arriving on college campuses across the country. When the fall 2023 term begins, close to 20% of communitycollegestudents will also be high school students who are dually enrolled.
A rare partnership between a group of communitycolleges and a private, for-profit institution is aiming to fix that. The Alamo Colleges District, made up of five communitycolleges, is the largest provider of higher education in South Texas with over 100,000 students, 81% of whom are students of color.
Two new reports from The California Alliance for Student Parent Success (The Alliance) detail the challenges that student parents face at California institutions. Approximately 300,000 undergraduate student parents are currently enrolled at institutions of higher education in the state of California.
Her work around students’ basic needs, supporting undocumented and mixed-status students, and achieving social justice through focused racial equity efforts has made her a rising star in communitycollege leadership. She began as a professor of psychology counseling at Chabot College.
Students from underrepresented backgrounds face considerable barriers when it comes to completing a communitycollege program. Nationally, only 24% of African American, Latinx, and Native American students finish within two years. DFC has graduated an average of 56% of its students since its formation in 2017.
Terry O’Banion Communitycollegestudents who are from lower socio-economic backgrounds, are firstgeneration, and who have not been successful in high school are starving to death trying to find educational sustenance at the cafeteria curriculum.
Across higher education, the desire for diversity among student populations is usually the responsibility of recruitment efforts but falls short in retention strategies. Colleges typically use a variety of assessments such as standardized tests, essays, and GPA to determine a student's readiness for life in academia.
29, the new federal spending plan is set to increase the Pell Grant in 2023, allowing low-income students a chance to access up to $7,395 each year. The new total is a record high for the program, first created in 1972. The total student loan debt reached $1.75 With President Biden’s signature on Dec. Federal Reserve. “On
Legislators are looking to enshrine the Postsecondary Student Success Grant (PSSG) program, a student outcomes-centered federal effort, into law through new legislation this March. Although the effort has received support generally, some higher ed scholars and advocates have levied some criticisms and concerns about it.
A veteran of higher ed leadership, Welch was previously chair of the AASCU Board of Directors; president of Henderson State University; president of the Arkansas Association of Two-Year Colleges; chancellor of the University of Arkansas CommunityCollege at Hope-Texarkana; and vice chancellor for academic affairs at Arkansas State University-Beebe.
Deborah Santiago, CEO and co-founder of Excelencia in Education, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the support and success of Latinx students in higher education. That’s why Excelencia has issued four new reports in its continuing investigation into the relationship between institutions, Latinx students, and the workforce.
Yet less than 12% of resident 18-to-24-year-old students enrolled in our public universities are Hispanic. We see similar enrollment gaps for African American students, rural students, and low-income students. About 60% of our state university students graduate within six years.
At a time when the Latino population in the United States is growing and students are still facing daunting obstacles, Excelencia in Education is recognizing nine institutions for their clear and decisive commitment to Latino student success with the Seal of Excelencia. It enrolls roughly 43% first-generation Latino students.
Alexander oversees the legacy of the Academic Advancement Program (AAP) at UCLA, one of the longest running academic support programs for first-generation, low-income, and underrepresented students. Salcedo is the director of the Center for CommunityCollege Partnerships at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
Like mosquitoes, communitycolleges have the power to create a ripple of meaningful change. Communitycolleges, often under-appreciated yet mighty in their mission, are essential agents of transformationparticularly for students from historically marginalized communities. The numbers tell a powerful story.
Previously, she was vice president of instruction at CCC; vice president for academic and student affairs at Roxbury CommunityCollege; assistant professor of higher education at SUNY Buffalo; and English instructor at Université de Haute-Alsace.
Over half a million – 579,000 to be exact – Black students have left the American higher education system since 2011. Before and during COVID, most of these students vanished from our most affordable and accessible institutions – our communitycolleges. All employees see themselves as student success advocates.
Spring enrollment numbers are looking up across the postsecondary sector, according to the latest data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, which collects data from almost all U.S. This spring, growth was primarily driven by communitycolleges, where enrollment rose 4.7% institutions. in suburban areas.
Created in 2005 by Excelencia in Education, Examples of Excelencia is a national initiative that recognizes institutions and nonprofit organizations that identify, aggregate, and promote evidence-based practices that improve Latinx student access in higher education. million research grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Communitycolleges have taken great pride over many decades as an open-door institution welcoming students who had no other place to go. They have created special programs for students who are under-served, at risk, firstgeneration, Black males, women, migrants, and prisoners.
Back in February, more than 1,000 practitioners from hundreds of colleges across the nation gathered in Orlando, Florida, to exchange evidence-based approaches to accelerating student success and equity. We are not leaving our colleges in Florida behind, and most importantly, we’re not leaving our students in Florida behind.”
Many communitycollegestudents are the first in their family to attend college, and this designation comes with its own share of responsibilities and challenges. Learn about the support available specifically for first-generationcommunitycollegestudents.
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