Transcript PP3

Craig Rutan, Curriculum and Instruction Council Chair
2013 Fall Academic Senate Retreat
 One of the primary challenges facing community
colleges is increasing the number of students
completing their educational goals.
 Currently an educational goal is defined as completing
a degree, certificate, or transferring to a university but
that definition may broaden with education plans.
 A prerequisite is a required criteria (completion of a
course, minimum GPA, etc) that a student MUST
satisfy to enroll.
 Prerequisites should only be added to courses if the
student MUST complete the prerequisite to be
successful.
 This does not mean that you every student that took
your course without completing the prerequisite would
fail.
 Prerequisites are established upon approval by the
Curriculum and Instruction Council and the Board of
Trustees
 Does your class require a lot of writing or specific math
skills to be successful?
 Currently, the only way to add a prerequisite writing,
reading, or computation is through statistical data
validation.
 Title 5 was changed in 2011 to allow districts to use
content review instead of statistical validation.
 This would require a change to board policy and the
administrative regulation!
 Adding a prerequisite could cause your enrollment to
drop but we shouldn’t make curricular decisions based
on enrollment fears.
 If students will be more successful having completed
the prerequisite, doesn’t it make sense to add it?
 Students get very frustrated when they enroll in a
course and then find out that they aren’t really ready
for it.
 We should never add a prerequisite just because we
think it is a good idea.
 Students already have to take many classes and forcing
them to take additional ones should only happen
when it is absolutely necessary.
 Freshman and Sophomore level coursework for
baccalaureate degrees
 Equivalent / Acceptable coursework at the CC and
CSU or UC
 Designates foundation for upper-level study in a
discipline
 While STEM majors have been dealing with major
preparation for years, many other majors are
beginning to look at major preparation as well.
 How many of you have looked at the major
preparation options in your major at your local CSUs
and UCs?
 Student preparation for transfer is now more
important than ever.
 All UC campuses are selective admission
 Nearly all CSU campuses are impacted
 Many have designated completion of sets of coursework
for admission
 Completion of GE may be secondary focus for
admission selection
 For faculty to be open to changing their curriculum,
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they need to know what gaps exist, where to start.
Show them how they can look at your articulation
agreements on ASSIST.
They will be able to see lower division courses their
students get credit for and those that they don’t.
Course-to-Course vs Course-to-Requirement
Knowledge is power!
 We have several areas where the student can begin
their path but not complete it at SCC.
 We need to determine if these pathways should be
built to completion or if we take those areas out of our
catalog.
 We are being asked to increase the number of students
completing degrees and certificates.
 Does your department ensure that all of the required
courses are being offered on a regular basis?
 If your program has multiple degrees, are students
earning all of them? What does one degree offer that
the other does not?
 Transfer degrees are not going anywhere!
 One way to improve student success could be through
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adding prerequisites.
Content review could be used but we would need to
change policy.
Major preparation is becoming increasing important
for all majors.
Make sure that you have a complete pathway for
students.
Required courses for degrees and certificates need to
be scheduled regularly.