Posted by Renata Funke on February 26, 2009 in Developing Questions, Faculty Inquiry Groups (FIG), Fear, Identity, Learning to Learn, Making Visible, Math, Metacognition, Pre/Post, Proposals, Student Confidence, Student Interviews, Student Teams, Student Voice, Surveys, Teaching Problem Solving, Using Institutional Research, Video Evidence with No Comments
College of the Siskiyous is focusing on what helps students become more intrinsically motivated as they navigate the intersection between student learning and students’ identities as outsiders or insiders in the college environment. The Inquiry team will use video footage to capture student reflections and experiences, as well as classroom discussions and athletic activities. One student group to be included are African-American student athletes adjusting to the isolation they find in the small rural community of Weed, California near the Oregon border. Another group will be students of Math who started at the college with Pre-Algebra and who are currently enrolled in Intermediate Algebra from a course called “Math for the Confused,” who will describe and analyze their experiences and what helped them succeed in their math courses. A group of students from a Leadership Training class will dialog with a group from a Social Psychology class to explore ways students can become intrinsically motivated. By closely examining data on students’ performance and experiences, the Inquiry team aims to identify blind spots in the college’s approach to basic skills and, ultimately, find ways to “light the fire” in students with histories of low educational attainment.
Team Leader:
Renata Funke / Director, Yreka Campus
530-842-1245 Fax: 530-841-5221
funke@siskiyous.edu
Team Members:
Les Courtemanche / Football/Track assistant coach/instructor of a Leadership Training class
Deborah Randolph / Math instructor of a “Math for the Confused” class (pre-pre-algebra level)
Eve Thompson / English
Patrice Thatcher / ECE Program Coordinator
Catey Olivolo / Nursing
Mark Oliver / Videography
Tags: classroom discussions, college environment, college of the siskiyous, ece program, educational attainment, football track, inquiry team, intermediate algebra, leadership training, math courses, math instructor, oregon border, pre algebra, psychology class, small rural community, social psychology, student reflections, weed california
Posted by Katie Hern on February 3, 2009 in Equity, Integrative Learning, Learning Communities, Reading, Using Institutional Research, Writing with No Comments
The following links provide an example of integrating different kinds of institutional data into an Inquiry into student learning. The Inquiry focused on understanding the impact a new learning community was having on participating students. It tracks the founding cohort of learning community students over a year and a half, looking at their rates of engagement, learning, success, retention, persistence, and progress in the curriculum, and comparing these to students who enrolled in comparable non-learning community classes at the same time. As part of an equity analysis, the data is also disaggregated by age and ethnicity, showing that the program had a positive impact on the achievement gap African-American and Latino students often experience in the English curriculum.
Springboard_Impact_Study
Springboard_Impact_Summary_(Bar_Graphs)