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	<title>New England Board of Higher Education &#187; developmental education</title>
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		<title>Successful Developmental Math: “Review-Pretest-Retest” Model Helps Students Move Forward</title>
		<link>http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/successful-developmental-math-review-pretest-retest-model-helps-students-move-forward-in-math/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=successful-developmental-math-review-pretest-retest-model-helps-students-move-forward-in-math</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 16:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nebhe.org/?post_type=thejournal&#038;p=18219</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Much has been written about the failure of “developmental education” in mathematics. Failure has not been our experience at Worcester State University. In response to concerns about both the placement rate into developmental math courses and the failure rate in those courses, we made substantial changes in our placement program and in our course delivery. ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="pf-content"><p>Much has been written about the failure of “developmental education” in mathematics. Failure has not been our experience at Worcester State University. In response to concerns about both the placement rate into developmental math courses and the failure rate in those courses, we made substantial changes in our placement program and in our course delivery. We have decreased by 50% the number of students placed into developmental math courses. The success rate in these courses has increased from around 30% to around 80%.</p>
<p>Our program is based on several key principles:</p>
<ul>
<li>Students can be successful in mathematics with the correct entry point. Mathematics is a cumulative subject. Because students who take courses they are not prepared for are seldom successful, we rigorously maintain the prerequisite standards for our classes. However, we do not want to place students in developmental classes when all they need is a brief review. We work to ensure that students take placement seriously and are prepared to do as well as possible when they take the placement tests.</li>
<li>We provide clear, consistent standards for all students. It doesn’t help students by pretending they have competencies that they don’t. In particular, different sections of developmental math must use equivalent grading techniques. All students must pass the same final exam to pass the class.</li>
<li>We provide a nurturing and supportive environment for students who have often had negative experiences in mathematics. Students need to know that their instructors are there to help them when they struggle. However, the most supportive thing we do is placing students appropriately.</li>
<li>We encourage all students to enroll in required math classes as soon as possible. Math proficiency atrophies over time. This means we have to offer sufficient seats for first-year students in both developmental and introductory credit-bearing classes. We work with our advising center to place students in these courses.</li>
</ul>
<p><b>Reducing need for remediation<br />
</b></p>
<p>The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Higher Education mandates that all incoming students in the state’s public higher education system attain a “passing” score on the College Board’s Elementary Algebra Accuplacer exam or pass an appropriate developmental math class before enrolling in a college credit-bearing math courses. In fall 2004, 54% of our first-year students received a “failing” score.</p>
<p>For the class entering in fall 2005, we required students to take a mock Accuplacer exam before they could register for orientation, where the actual exam was given. This mock exam was taken at home on the student’s own computer. It was not proctored. We saw this as a consciousness-raising activity—a way to give students a sense of what to expect as well as to let them know about the importance of the exam. With this change, our “failure” rate dropped from 54% to 36%.</p>
<p>The following year, we made additional changes. Before a student could register for orientation, he had to achieve a “passing” score on the mock Accuplacer exam. If he didn’t get a “passing score” after two opportunities, he had to come to campus for a two-hour math review session. With this additional change, the “failure” rate dropped to 24%. Since then it has been consistently around 25%</p>
<p><b>The placement process</b></p>
<p>The initial Department of Higher Education mandate for developmental math in 1998 set a single passing score of 82 on Elementary Algebra Accuplacer for determining whether a student was ready for college-level math classes. In 2001, the department added a second cut score of 72 for courses that used minimal amounts of algebra, such as a math for liberal arts courses.</p>
<p>At Worcester State’s Mathematics Department, we decided we needed more detail to appropriately place students. Many students needed developmental work in arithmetic as well as algebra. And while a score of 82 on the Elementary Algebra Accuplacer might indicate readiness for a college algebra class, it told us nothing about whether a student was prepared for calculus. We want each student to begin mathematics coursework at the best entry point. As a result, all first-year students begin by taking two Accuplacer exams: Arithmetic and Elementary Algebra.</p>
<ul>
<li>If they need developmental math work, we use a combination of the two scores to determine whether they need to take an arithmetic course before taking a developmental algebra course.</li>
<li>If they score 82 or higher on the elementary algebra Accuplacer, they then take the college-level math Accuplacer. This score is used to determine the possible starting points for the student’s college-level math classes.</li>
</ul>
<p>Logistically, each student is assigned a placement code of 1 through 7 based upon their scores on the two or three Accuplacer exams. Mathematicians call this a function of three variables where the range is: {1,2,3,4,5,6,7}. For example, a code of 1 means a student begins with our developmental arithmetic class. A code of 7 means a student may begin with calculus. During the registration process, placement codes are examined as part of the process of checking prerequisites. A student who wishes to take calculus needs either a code of 7 or successful completion of precalculus with a grade of at least C-. (Our experience has been that a student with a D seldom passes the subsequent course.)</p>
<p><b>The Developmental Math Program: philosophy</b></p>
<p>The WSU Developmental Math Program is designed to meet the academic needs of students who scored below 82 out of 120 on the Elementary Algebra Accuplacer exam. Many of these students have negative emotions and thought patterns around mathematics that needed to shift before they would be able to learn the subject matter. Some are so used to failing math that they don’t believe that they have the ability to succeed. They would rather walk away than face the challenge, despite the fact that this would severely limit their ability to earn a bachelor’s degree. For students who had already incurred significant student loans, failure to complete their degree would leave them with increased debt and decreased income potential. This heightens the anxiety associated with learning math.</p>
<p>Our program strives to create a classroom environment where students believe they can succeed and know they will have the support of the instructor. In each new class, the instructor’s initial goal is to build a relationship of mutual trust and respect. When these students enter the developmental math class, many things are different from how they were in their previous math classes. Since they are in a class with students at similar skill levels, most are no longer at the bottom of their class. Furthermore, the students are older and more mature than the last time they took a math class. With a positive environment, they are more likely to persevere and succeed. We find that as student anxiety begins to subside, they relax and start learning. All these benefits are only possible because the students are placed in a class that is being taught at their current proficiency level.</p>
<p>Underlying the program development, we have had a commitment to maintaining consistency of standards for all students and all course sections. Lowering standards for some students is not supportive and nurturing, but propagates student beliefs that they cannot succeed at mathematics. These beliefs reinforce societal perceptions of mathematical reasoning and skills as optional and only obtainable by a select few. Sadly, many higher education administrators and policymakers encourage these negative viewpoints</p>
<p><b>Implementation and design</b></p>
<p>Our current program was developed over the past 10 years and evolved through a series of iterations from a computer-based algebra review to one where students are placed according to their arithmetic and algebra skills into one of two developmental math courses that address topics required for success in WSU’s college-level math courses.</p>
<p>The developmental courses meet three hours per week, carry three institutional credits and are taught in a more traditional face-to-face format. (Institutional credit counts toward maintaining full-time status so students are eligible to receive financial aid and live in the residence halls, but not toward graduation.) We have used feedback from assessment data as we sought effective ways to teach and support our students. As we have developed these classes, the success rates of our courses have increased from 31% in 2003 to about 80%.</p>
<p>To maintain consistent standards across students and sections, we use the Arithmetic or Elementary Algebra Accuplacer as the final exam for each class. Students must pass this final exam to pass the course. Since the instructors no longer decide whether a student passes, they become more like coaches, working with the student to increase skills and achieve a common goal. Instructors meet with individual student, assign extra problem sets and arrange for tutoring. While success is ultimately the student’s responsibility, we want to provide as much support as we can.</p>
<p>We believe our students need structure and a series of smaller goals before the final exam. Therefore, we require that all students have a 70% average in the course in order to qualify to take the final exam, the Accuplacer. This requirement is made clear on the syllabus and the instructors discuss this throughout the semester. In the last three weeks of the semester, students with averages below 70% are invited to work with tutors to address topics on which they are struggling. They are given an additional quiz that provides the opportunity to raise their average and qualify for the final. Of course, our real goal is to get them to review the material so they pass the final. It’s a learning activity. The underlying principal is that we want to promote success without lowering standards and expectations.</p>
<p>If students qualify to take the final exam, but do not pass it, we discuss a re-test opportunity with them. The instructor offers these students a set of review problems and gives them a limited amount of time to complete it. This is another learning activity. Once the students complete the review material, they are given a pretest to determine if they have improved their skills. Students who perform favorable on the pretest may retake the final exam. This “review–pretest–retest” process helps most of the students pass and move forward with their mathematics program.</p>
<p><strong>Changing minds</strong></p>
<p>Most of our students who score into the developmental math program are in majors that require only one college-level math course. Many students enter the developmental math program intending to complete their developmental math and a single college level math class; but after experiencing success, they reevaluate their options. This was the situation for Jeremy Hart, a 30-year-old military veteran who entered the developmental arithmetic class as a history major. He had many doubts about his ability to succeed at mathematics and had chosen a major with a minimal math requirement. He planned on finishing his mathematics requirement as quickly as possible by taking our most basic college-level course, called “Survey of Math.” When the arithmetic class began with fractions, Hart found the class a safe place to openly express his confusion and frustration. He became so comfortable with his ability to learn mathematics that he changed his major from history to business administration. He successfully completed many courses that required mathematical and quantitative reasoning including statistics, college algebra, mathematical economics, microeconomics and three accounting classes. He is currently employed in a managerial job that brings together the skills he developed at Worcester State and in the military. He manages a multimillion-dollar budget and performs cost and statistical analyses as he contributes to his organization’s success.</p>
<p>Our program works, but we are constantly looking for ways to minimize the need for remediation. We work with Massachusetts high schools through the state GEAR UP (Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs) so students can take our placement tests while still in high school. And we are currently studying how students who successfully complete our developmental courses perform in the first college-level math class.</p>
<p>Developmental math education does not have to be a failure, as long as we are all willing to meet the challenge.</p>
<p><strong><i>Richard Bisk</i></strong><i> is a professor of mathematics at Worcester State University and was math department chair from 2004-2012</i><i>. <b>Mary Fowler</b> is an associate professor and current chair of the math department at Worcester State. <strong>Eileen B. Perez</strong> is Developmental Math Program coordinator and lead instructor at Worcester State.</i></p>
<p><i> </i><b><br />
</b></p>
<p><b>Related Posts:</b></p>
<p><b><a href="http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/improving-math-success-in-higher-education-institutions/">Improving Math Success in Higher Education Institutions</a></b></p>
<p><a href="http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/developing-story-a-forum-on-improving-remedial-education/"><strong>Developing Story: A Forum on Improving Remedial Education</strong></a><b></b></p>
<p><b> </b></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Developing Story: A Forum on Improving Remedial Education</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2012 01:22:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nebhe.org/?post_type=thejournal&#038;p=14983</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Why is remedial or developmental education such a hot issue? Partly because it costs time and money and casts doubt on the elementary and secondary education systems that we assume will prepare students for college.</p>
<p>The New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) explored solutions to the problem at a recent forum in Kennebunkport, Maine, called ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="pf-content"><p>Why is <em>remedial</em> or <em>developmental</em> education such a hot issue? Partly because it costs time and money and casts doubt on the elementary and secondary education systems that we assume will prepare students for college.</p>
<p>The New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) explored solutions to the problem at a recent forum in Kennebunkport, Maine, called “Ready for Real: Innovative Strategies for Improving Remedial Education and College Success.”</p>
<p>NEBHE staff briefed the audience of educators, legislators and policymakers on the recent Lumina Foundation for Education <a href="http://www.nebhe.org/newslink/nebhe-awarded-lumina-foundation-for-education-grant-to-work-with-khan-academy-to-boost-remedial-math/">grant</a> the regional organization received to support community colleges implementing Khan Academy materials in developmental math courses. NEBHE also released a <a href="http://www.nebhe.org/info/pdf/events/boardmeetings/sept2012/NEBHE-Policy_Snapshot_Increasing_College_Readiness.pdf">policy brief</a> outlining college placement policies across the region and models for boosting college readiness.</p>
<p><strong>Rethinking developmental ed</strong></p>
<p>Many colleges use the College Board’s Accuplacer test to determine whether students are ready for credit-bearing college courses or first need to take and pass one or more remedial classes.</p>
<p>In a session on “Rethinking Developmental Education: State and Institutional Perspectives,”<strong> </strong>Lara Couturier, program director at Jobs for the Future, offered a national context for remediation. She noted that 60% of community college students were referred into developmental education programs—<em>Dev Ed</em> as she called it. Once there, most never progressed into college-credit-bearing work, and only one-quarter earned a college degree within eight years.</p>
<p>A historian by training, Couturier spoke about different developmental education models, including some involving long sequences of courses with too many exit points where students are tempted to drop out—and too often do. Some call Dev Ed the place where college dreams go to die. Others, Couturier among them, believe it should be looked at in a more holistic way, as an “on-ramp to a structured pathway to graduation.” Virginia has been a leader in a wave of states redesigning developmental education, followed by North Carolina and Florida. Another promising model is the <a href="http://cap.3csn.org/">California Acceleration Project</a>, which aims to reduce the number of exit points.</p>
<p>Some models involve partnering with local K-12 districts, so students’ skills can be assessed in their junior year of high school. If at the point, the students are deemed not college-ready, they can take remedial courses while still in high school. Others make developmental education a <em>co-requisite—</em>a formal course taken <em>simultaneously</em> with another as opposed to a prerequisite. The Community College of Baltimore County, for example, places developmental students into college-level English but also supports them with an hour-long companion course.</p>
<p>Couturier noted that the placement tests that have been relied upon historically may not be the good predictors of success we thought they were. She also urged aligning development education with the student’s major and career interest. The spotlight, she suggested, should shift to getting development education students into programs of study, which means more intentional and frequent <em>advising.</em></p>
<p>Couturier also noted a dearth of efforts to help students who are <em>severely</em> underprepared.</p>
<p><strong>Feed me data</strong></p>
<p>Norwalk Community College President David Levinson, who is also vice president for Community Colleges with the Connecticut Board of Regents for Higher Education, said he was amazed by how <em>little</em> Connecticut relied on data when he came aboard in 2004. Indeed, a self-study for the  New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) had not a single bit of data. Then <a href="http://www.achievingthedream.org/">Achieving the Dream</a> came along and brought to bear the purpose of research, Levinson said.</p>
<p>Norwalk Community College has tried blending college-level courses and developmental courses in "learning communities" but that was with just over a dozen students. The question, said Levinson, is how do you bring that to scale?</p>
<p>Today, such issues are being overshadowed in Connecticut by legislation calling for all remediation to be confined to a one-semester, intensive course—not as a sequence. “We are faced with the really daunting task of not only a new structure that is not even a year old (the state's new Board of Regents for Higher Education) but also this humungous task of trying to implement a piece of legislation that doesn’t have a penny attached to it," said Levinson.</p>
<p>He noted that Connecticut acknowledges enrollment ‘swirling,’ and students starting at one school, taking some courses at another, and going on to get not only an associate degree but perhaps a bachelor’s and master’s. Levinson said that even at his college on Connecticut’s euphemistically named “Gold Coast,” 83% of students from Norwalk and Stamford need at least one precollege course. What politicians see in all this, he said, is the state paying for remedial education twice—in high school and college—and the students still are not succeeding.</p>
<p>Nashua Community College President Lucille Jordan said she was asked by the New Hampshire Legislature to identify which students needed developmental education and which high schools they came from. Problem was, she said, many have been out of high school for a long time.</p>
<p>Besides, what would have been a good enough score in math at one time no longer is. Nashua Community College uses <a href="http://professionals.collegeboard.com/higher-ed/placement/accuplacer/diagnostics" target="_blank">Accuplacer Diagnostics</a>, providing a detailed analysis of a student's strengths and weaknesses, so students can focus on the areas where they are weak. Jordan also called for embedding reading and study skills in 100-level courses. She acknowledged that many students may need tutors to stay with them through college-level coursework.</p>
<p>Community College of Vermont President Joyce Judy said the Vermont Legislature has chosen not to get involved in the developmental skills arena <em>per se</em>, focusing more on dual enrollment and multiple pathways.</p>
<p>“We have one shot with those students and if we’re not successful in helping them engage and feel like it’s relevant to them, we’ve lost them for another 10 or 15 years,” said Judy. Some students need a 15-week basic skills course; others need something different. We’re asking if Accuplacer is nuanced enough to see where strengths and weaknesses are, she said. She noted that the college is asking developmental English students to do a self-assessment, not of their skills, but of their practices, asking for example, if they read newspapers and magazines regularly.</p>
<p>“One size does not fit all,” said Judy. In developmental math, the Community College of Vermont is developing a one-credit, self-paced tutorial, which Judy says, “students could realistically move through in three weeks.” That’s a challenge, she noted, for institutions that like to go with 15-week courses that are easier to manage, but just don’t work for all students.</p>
<p>Several attendees said the Dev Ed conversation should not deal so much with <em>repairing</em> vs. <em>preparing</em>. Many believe the <a href="http://www.corestandards.org/">Common Core State Standards</a> will help with preparation, but there will always be adult learners who need some kind of remediation perhaps via new models such as massive open online courses (MOOCs).</p>
<p><strong>Sharing strategies</strong></p>
<p>Developmental education can be improved, but not eradicated, warned Rhode Island College President Nancy Carriuolo. For one thing, Dev Ed is not just remediation, but actually covers a wide range of learning needs exhibited by all learners. Thomas Edison today would have probably been placed in remediation, Carriuolo asserted, because of his deficiencies in reading and writing.</p>
<p>“Policymakers often don’t know firsthand the distractions low-income students have—families to support, drug or alcohol problems, low self-esteem and the cumulative effect that comes from not doing well in school," Carriuolo said, adding: "Notice in that brief list, I didn’t say anything about poor teaching.”</p>
<p>“We need to think carefully about what will happen to the most underprepared students who are turned away from community colleges," Carriuolo reflected. "Will they enter adult basic education to learn the basic skills they need … will they enter a training program someplace else or will they simply go home to their couches, a bag of potato chips and a life sustained by a welfare check?”</p>
<p><strong>Solving the math problem?</strong></p>
<p>At Housatonic Community College, students who went through developmental English passed the gatekeeper college English at a 20% higher rate than those who tested straight into the course without the detour, said President Anita Gliniecki. But math was completely opposite, she said. Even if you got through the developmental math, your potential to succeed was at least 10% lower than those who tested directly in.</p>
<p>Students noted that the developmental math moved too slowly over the topics they already knew and too quickly over those they didn’t know—and still don’t. So Housatonic started self-paced courses, in which students test out of items they know and focus on items they don’t, until they ultimately demonstrate all the competencies. Faculty also embed in the course measures of how much time students spend on the work to keep an eye not only on skills but also on <em>affective</em> behavior.</p>
<p>When Housatonic allowed students to take an online math refresher programs, then retake Accuplacer, 69% of students increased at least one course level.</p>
<p>Speaking more broadly, Gliniecki and Carriuolo both lamented students' failure to "estimate," urging that high school calculus courses have students put away their calculators.</p>
<p><strong>A private option</strong></p>
<p>Deborah Hirsch, vice president for development at the private, four-year Mount Ida College, said one-third of students there are “first-generation,” one-third are Pell Grant-eligible; and half of entering Mount Ida students place into developmental education courses, but are also enrolled in college-level courses.</p>
<p>Mount Ida, she said, has tried to create some linked courses, for example, offering students guided study skills linked with Introductory Psychology.</p>
<p>And because the sequence of developmental math was a Bermuda Triangle for students, Mount Ida decided to combine the two-level sequence of developmental math courses into one course. The college renovated the classroom with chairs and desks that move easily on wheels, laptops and smartboards. The class features three days of mini-lectures and one day of  lab. Mount Ida has also added a "financial literacy" component, so it’s more relevant to students who often don’t want to be taking high school math again.</p>
<p>Finally, Mount Ida formed partnership with Persistence Plus—the “Weight Watchers” of college completion. The system uses smartphones to give students personalized, real-time “nudges” to help them set and reach goals, manage their time, cope with setbacks and connect with campus services. The nudges include personalized motivators—such as "did you know a third of your class is in the library now studying for the exam?"</p>
<p>Janet Sortor, vice president and dean of academic affairs at Southern Maine Community College, where enrollment has quadrupled in 10 years, promoted an advising course called “My Maine Guide.” The program offers a personalized online portal for students, which provides quick access to student’s electronic portfolio, course schedule, important reminders and other tasks. And students are required to take Freshman Interest Groups—theme-based one-credit courses that combine college success skills, goal exploration and setting, and investigation of a topic aimed at capturing the interest of students.</p>
<p><strong>National views</strong></p>
<p>At an evening session, Bruce Vandal, vice president of Complete College America, and William Trueheart, president of Achieving the Dream, addressed a panel on national views on developmental education and improving graduation odds.</p>
<p>Vandal noted the urgency of addressing college readiness, particularly in light of the Common Core State Standards assessments coming online in 2014. A study by ACT suggests that in many states, fewer than half of students who take that test will be deemed “college ready.”</p>
<p>Vandal urged states to focus on developing strategies that effectively transition students from high school to postsecondary institutions, including early assessment in high school, perhaps 10<sup>th</sup> grade. He also called for better pathways into academic programs by realizing that not all students need the same skills. Students in social sciences and humanities, for example, may not need the heavy algebra appropriate for STEM students. He suggested diversifying the placement tests used to predict success, including adding high school GPA.</p>
<p>Trueheart described the mission of Achieving the Dream to help students, many of them lower-income and students of color, to be college ready. He held out the example of El Paso Community College in Texas, where 98% of students in 2003-04 needed remedial education, partly because so many students at the border institution did not speak English as their first language. In 10 years, the community college closed achievement gaps in math and English and raised rates of completion significantly.<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Legislative view</strong></p>
<p>At a session of legislators and former legislators on the NEBHE board, Maine state Rep. Emily Cain began by citing the recent finding by economist Anthony Carnevale of Georgetown University that job growth is occurring for jobs that require a credential beyond high school, but is declining for jobs that require only a high school diploma.</p>
<p>Maine state Sen.<em> </em>Brian Langley, Senate chair of the Education Committee, took time from opening his restaurant in Ellsworth, Maine, to describe his path as a nontraditional learner through vocational school, community college, the University of Southern Maine, Syracuse University, and the online Capella University. But, he assured the audience, he understands the pressures of traditional higher education cost issues, having put his kids through Colby College and the University of Michigan. “I have a picture in my mind of good culinarians who are still working in the industry but left my programs because they didn’t have the math or writing skills to do college-level work.” said Langley. "A few have taken remediation courses and failed them; adult ed can be more supportive," he believes.</p>
<p>Rhode Island state Sen. Hanna M. Gallo, chair of Education Committee and a speech pathologist by training, said she is a big proponent of full-day kindergarten. If that were available, she said, the college readiness problem wouldn’t come down to high school failing or college remediation. We need to remediate <em>not</em> in college, but earlier, she said, adding, that we also need better teacher-training programs at colleges, professional development and accountability for parents and communities.</p>
<p>Former Massachusetts state Sen. Joan Menard, now vice president at Bristol Community College, said that being all things for all people has become a problem for community colleges. They admit everyone, including adults with 6<sup>th</sup> grade educations, and help employers write workforce training grants, but they are judged on graduation rates. Menard argued that community colleges need to bring legislators to campus not only to ask for more money and when parents and students call with complaints, but to tell them the good things that are happening.</p>
<p>Among those good things, New Hampshire state Rep. Ralph Boehm, vice chair of the House Education Committee, told of Nashua Community College's relationships with Honda for car mechanics and Delta Dental's gift of equipment to New Hampshire Technical Institute to help train dental hygienists.</p>
<p>Middlesex Community College President Carole Cowan urged community colleges to partner with vocational-technical and high schools. But, she added, don't dismiss the academic mission" “Those technical workers are going to go for a baccalaureate degree some day because they will want to walk that pathway to greater success.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>NEBHE Awarded Lumina Foundation for Education Grant to Work with Khan Academy to Boost Remedial Math</title>
		<link>http://www.nebhe.org/newslink/nebhe-awarded-lumina-foundation-for-education-grant-to-work-with-khan-academy-to-boost-remedial-math/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=nebhe-awarded-lumina-foundation-for-education-grant-to-work-with-khan-academy-to-boost-remedial-math</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2012 20:16:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[* Goal is to increase student persistence and completion 
* Drive reform of developmental math
<p>The  New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) was awarded a $356,200  grant from the Lumina Foundation to support a developmental education  project that provides a high-quality, low-cost instructional platform  coupling Khan Academy and community college resources.</p>
<p>The ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="pf-content"><div><span style="color: #800000;"><strong>* Goal is to increase student persistence and completion</strong><strong> </strong></span></div>
<div><span style="color: #800000;"><strong>* Drive reform of developmental math</strong></span></div>
<p>The  New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) was awarded a $356,200  grant from the Lumina Foundation to support a developmental education  project that provides a high-quality, low-cost instructional platform  coupling Khan Academy and community college resources.</p>
<p>The  project aims to boost the number of high-quality college degrees and  credentials by improving student performance in developmental  mathematics, and to further drive reform of developmental mathematics  instruction, including new designs, lower costs and improved student  outcomes.</p>
<div>
<p>As  leaders ranging from President Obama to Lumina Foundation have heralded  increased "college completion," one obstacle has been the many students  leaving high school but are not "college ready." They are often steered  toward developmental or "remedial" courses. These sub-college-level  programs cost them money and time. But they generally don't award  credit, pushing off the day when the students can become educated  contributors to society. Moreover, research shows that many remedial  programs have low success and persistence rates.</p>
<p>The  NEBHE program will leverage Khan Academy's math content (conceptual  videos, practice exercises and adaptive assessment environment) for  community college students and faculty in various developmental  education delivery models.</p>
<p>The  initiative will initially benefit participating New England two-year  institutions, but will be available to students and colleges nationwide.</p>
<p>NEBHE  estimates that between 50% and 70% of all incoming community college  students will need one or more developmental math courses.</p>
<p>Most  of Khan Academy's work has focused exclusively up to now on K-12  schools, but it has recently developed a new interest in postsecondary  education. The NEBHE demonstration project promises outcomes and  deliverables that will support the adaptation of no-cost tools to  accelerate developmental mathematics reform and provide timely research  data.</p>
<p>The  project is fully aligned with current national initiatives-including  the Common Core Standards for Success-to increase college completion,  reform remedial education reform and advance free courseware and  technology-enabled instruction. Further, while research indicates that  technology-assisted, accelerated and contextualized strategies show  great promise for improving developmental mathematics performance, the  availability of high-quality, cost-effective tools is limited.</p>
<p>"We  see this project as a away to generate high-impact data and research  findings related to developmental math instruction and college  persistence," said NEBHE President &amp; CEO Michael K. Thomas. "We  thank Lumina Foundation and look forward to working with Khan and the  community colleges to drive and inform changes in policies, programs and  practices at the institution, system and state levels."</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001uz7eQxKbSXQ5l_w-aaHRavp5AAcMx-54HRq_lFsSAaJHyiFH3Rg9OuV4m5hfaCnFxAohVoDSkeB5pMLOUl1hS2bAqg593JyKyVJaU5zBOzlOzC84E8MtzvKCgum_ukupzI99YsbpRXw=" target="_blank">Lumina Foundation </a></strong> is an Indianapolis-based private foundation dedicated to expanding access and success in education beyond high school. This  mission is directed toward a single, overarching big goal-to increase  the percentage of Americans with high-quality degrees and credentials to  60% by the year 2025.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.khanacademy.org/" target="_blank"><strong>Khan Academy</strong></a> is a nonprofit organization with the goal of changing education for the  better by providing a free world-class education for anyone anywhere.  All the site's resources are available to anyone. It doesn't matter if  you are a student, teacher, home-schooler, principal, adult returning to  the classroom after 20 years, or a friendly alien just trying to get a  leg up in earthly biology. The Khan Academy's materials and resources  are available to you completely free of charge.</p>
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