Door Number One offers introductory profiles of a dozen of the many Programs and Services offered at Chabot College. Students, Staff, and Faculty share their experiences and offer their perspectives about why these Programs and Services are so vital, and what students can expect if they just “Pick One.” And along the way, we see what it takes to successfully repel a Zombie Student Attack on Chabot College!
The creation of Door Number One was generously supported by:
* SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
*Chabot Student Services Funding for Retention Initiatives
*Chabot Enrollment Management Committee (CEMC)
*CLPCCD Office of Public Information and Marketing
In Going The Distance, Chabot College students and faculty share their experiences in taking — and teaching — Distance Education courses. They speak candidly and with insight about: “How the availability of DE courses plays a crucial role in their college matriculation” “What it takes to succeed in the online setting” “How the workload compares with more traditional classroom settings” “How student interactions compare with traditional classroom settings” “What it is like to interact with a teacher in the online environment” and more! Edited in a visual style inspired by the world of technology, Going The Distance offers an engaging, fresh discussion of the promise and challenges of Distance Education.
The creation of Going The Distance was generously supported by: SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
(FIN employee Monique Williams made this film while a student at Chabot College.)
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.
The Faculty Inquiry Network’s (FIN) purpose is to support professional development which includes: conducting faculty inquiry; revisiting basic skills assumptions; interpreting and integrating data; accessing student voices; developing students as co-inquirers; making visible; using technology for teaching and learning; creating and supporting new initiatives, curriculum and program development; constructing educational tools using digital media; and hosting dialogue around student and faculty learning.
I hope that all of you can attend the Umoja VI student run conference that is being assisted by FIN. The students have come up with many creative appr...