Wracrevised Basic Skills
Transcript of Wracrevised Basic Skills
Cindy HicksCindy HicksChabot CollegeChabot College
Title 3 Basic Skills Coordinator, 1993-94Former WRAC Center Coordinator, 1999-2002
Learning Connection Project Development Coordinator, 2005-now
Reading, Writing, Reading, Writing, Learning:Learning:
From the WRITING AND READING ACROSS THE
CURRICULUM CENTER to the
LEARNING CONNECTION
Integrating Writing and Reading
Come gather ‘round the fire to hear stories from long ago.
In 1993-1994, three events converged at Chabot College:
1. We received a $5 million Title 3 grant to address, in part, basic skills in English, ESL, and Math. Our Student Services area was funded to create a Tutorial Center.
2. The College converted from quarters to semesters, so curriculum had to be adjusted.
3. We had recently hired many new tenure-track English instructors.
Title 3We had proposed combining our Reading Center
and our Writing Center.
WHY?
Since the late eighties, we had added reading to our Writing Across the Curriculum project, making it WRAC. We began inviting speakers who knew or were learning about teaching reading to adults, such as Joan M. Naake and Elizabeth V. Biggert, from Consumnes River College, who had co-directed an FII Reading Across the Curriculum project.
Our Reading and Writing Centers were mastery-learning based and provided a path for students to English 1A. We wanted a different approach, one which supported the academic reading and writing students were actually engaged in at the moment. Also, we wanted a center that supported students’ work rather than one that provided a way to meet the prerequisite for English 1A.
Research ProjectObligated by Title 3 to integrate our Reading Center and Writing Center into a Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (WRAC) Center, English instructors used the opportunity provided by the funding, quarter-to-semester conversion, and new instructors to devote two quarters to research in order to rethink our curriculum.
5. The results were “Articulated Assumptions” and the “Throughline.”
4. We attended conferences, enrolled in classes, and read in order to inform ourselves about teaching reading and writing to adults. We shared what we learned with one another.
3. We attended conferences, enrolled in classes, and read in order to learn about the use of computers in teaching writing.
2. We began our research by asking questions in order to learn our common beliefs and values and to determine areas in which we didn’t agree.
1. Early on, English instructors took the Myers-Briggs as a community-building activity. Later, we opened each meeting by addressing people’s questions, concerns, criticisms, which could be submitted anonymously.
Articulated AssumptionsExcerpts from the assumptions, developed in approximately 1995:
Book-length works should be included in all levels of our curriculum.
Many students who currently don’t pass preparatory courses need more time reading, reasoning, writing critically, and/or improving “studenting” skills.
We do not generally favor students’ expository essays being exclusively personal reflection.
Student essays should largely, if not always, be based upon a response to something the students have read.
We should offer preparatory English students the same kind of reading and writing experiences we offer freshman comp students.
Preparatory English students lack student skills.
Students who improve their reading tend to improve their writing and vice versa.
A “whole language” approach--i.e., one that involves reading, writing, speaking, and listening--is desirable.
The hierarchal model of English where skills proceed from words to sentences to paragraphs to essay structure is not favored in this division.
“Throughline”Excerpts from the “Throughline", developed in approximately 1997:
Increase students’ familiarity with and knowledge of the academic culture, themselves as learners, and the relationship of the two.
Include full-length works.
Create settings which include speaking, listening, and responding in order to foster community building and forge links to critical reading and writing.
Emphasize critical thinking, the making of meaning. Critical thinking includes seeing patterns, drawing inferences, evaluating for purpose, synthesizing….
Approach the teaching of writing by inviting students to write prose pieces of varying length and complexity. Writing is not taught in a progression from the sentence to the paragraph to the essay.
Address directly students’ reading practices. Reading is absolutely critical to academic success, and we strive to include more reading, in terms of both range and depth, in our program.
Integrate reading, writing, critical thinking, speaking, and listening.English courses at all levels will--
The WRAC CenterGoals and Values:
The WRAC Center will value collaboration among instructors, staff, and students, respecting that each contributes to the learning environment.
WRAC Center computer hardware and software, as well as computer classroom design, will be guided by the instructional values reflected in the Articulated Assumptions and the “Throughline.”
As an English department program, the WRAC Center will be guided by the Articulated Assumptions and the “Throughline.”
The WRAC Center will offer assistance to students with their English classes.
The WRAC Center will offer assistance to students with their reading and writing from any class in any discipline.
The English Reading and Writing Core Curriculum Today
English 101A:Reading, Reasoning,
Writing I
English 7:Critical Thinking &
Writing--AC
English 4:Critical Thinking &Writing--Literature
English 101B:Reading, Reasoning,
Writing II
English 102:Reading, Reasoning,Writing--Accelerated
English 1A:Critical Reading
and Composition, followed by
or
or
Draft – 4/1/09
How Many Chabot College Students Make it from Basic Skills through College English in Two Years? It Depends on which Path They Take…
Chabot students can choose a two-semester developmental English sequence (Eng 101A-101B)
or an accelerated one-semester course (Eng 102). English 101A and 102 are both 4-unit, open-access courses with no minimum assessment score required.
Student Cohort Progress: Fall 2006 through Summer 2008
564
372 335275
0100200300400500600
Enroll 102 Succeed102
Enroll 1A Succeed1A
Eng 102 Accelerated Cohort
Overall Cohort Success in English 1A: 49% African-American Students: 50% Asian Students: 59% Filipino Students: 51% Latino Students: 42% White Students: 49%
522
304213
167 158 119
0100200300400500600
Enroll101A
Succeed101A
Enroll101B
Succeed101B
Enroll 1A Succeed1A
Eng 101A/B Non-Accelerated Cohort
Overall Cohort Success in English 1A: 23% African-American Students: 13% Asian Students: 36% Filipino Students: 31% Latino Students: 15% White Students: 20%
Curricular Note: Reading and writing are not separated in Chabot’s English curriculum; instead, all levels integrate instruction in reading, reasoning, and writing. In addition to the composition sequence, there are also ESL classes (ESL 110A-110D) and courses targeted to students with learning disabilities (Eng 116-118). Students can voluntarily choose these courses, or may be directed to them by college assessment process. However, they can also bypass these courses and enroll directly in English 101A or 102.
WRAC Center Programs Today
Drop-in Tutoring: Peer tutors help students with their reading and writing assignments.
Faculty-Student Tutorial in WRAC: English and other instructors work one-on-one with students by appointment. Individual learning plans are tailored to students’ needs. Variable units.
Computers with Word and Internet access are open for student use
Instructors may schedule classes in the WRAC Center computer “classrooms.”
Observations and DataStudents work with peer tutors on their writing primarily. Not often does a student request assistance with reading.
Most students who see peer tutors are in English classes. This may be the result of our moving to a cross-disciplinary learning support model. Students may be asking their life sciences tutor or math tutor, rather than a WRAC tutor, for assistance with the reading/writing in life sciences or math. This aligns with our efforts to support instructors so they can apprentice their students in their disciplines’ reading and reasoning. (More and more, we’re realizing that successful learning support programs, including tutorials, need to be aligned with inquiries and practices occurring across the campus.)
Of the students who use a WRAC Center service, 85% regularly report being satisfied with the service.
Our informal surveys regularly indicate that 82-85% of students who use any WRAC service succeed in the class for which they sought support.
What We’ve Learned from Experience
Change is on-going. Plan for resistance to change. Be aware different people will resist for different reasons, some of which may be good or, at least, legitimate.
(in no particular order)
Immediately hear and address people’s questions, concerns, issues.
Faculty need to drive the program. Pilots, activities, or programs must be initiated by instructors. Practice patience. Even when we instructors appear misguided, we must be able to try out an idea or an innovation, so that we can learn what works, what doesn’t, what’s possible, what isn’t.
Empower faculty to succeed. Think ahead about how to provide ongoing professional development. Support opportunities for instructors to learn about WAC, Reading Apprenticeship, and other promising practices. Encourage faculty inquiry and research.
Write down the mission, vision, policies, and procedures, and revisit them regularly in order to avoid having new instructors, coordinators, or administrators unaware of important history that informs the present.
Keep instructors actively engaged. Complacent instructors may rely on paraprofessional staff to make decisions that the instructors need to make.
Be intentional about location. Facilities must support the educational goals.
Report regularly to appropriate groups and committees to ease institutionalization of pilots and grants.
Think ahead from grant-funded to college supported. Watch the money; meet regularly with administrators, including CFO or designees.
More of What We’ve Learned
From WRAC to the Learning Connection
What is the Learning Connection?
In brief, it is a cross-curricular, learning support collaboration among students, faculty, and staff.
The Learning Connection strives to be innovative, collaborative, creative, efficient, and need and data driven as it pursues resources and opportunities to support teaching and learning.
More specifically, the Learning Connection is made up of the learning support programs offered through Academic Services, including: Tutorials, the WRAC Center, the Math Lab, the Language Center (ESL), ChabotLink peer advising, and a burgeoning Center for Teaching and Learning. Two additional centers are being developed: The Communications Center and a World Language Center. In addition, two programs are being successfully piloted at the present time: Peer Led Team Learning (two chemistry classes and one math class) and the Learning Assistant program.
In other words,Chabot College is striving to move from…
Math/Science Division
Math Math Lab
Room 1712 (Soon 3906)
Language Arts Division
English WRAC Center
Room 822
Language Arts Division
ESL/World Languages
Lang. Center Room 828
Student Services, then Language Arts
Division
Tutorials (Math & English)
Separate Centers, Budgets, Tutoring ProgramsSeparate Centers, Budgets, Tutoring Programs
To…
Chabot College
The Learning Connection
Teacher Research Faculty Inquiry Groups
Making Visible Project
CENTER FOR CENTER FOR TEACHING TEACHING AND LEARNINGAND LEARNING
Instructional Technology Learning Pilots Design and Assessment
Team Teaching Instructional Innovation/Class, Course, and Program Pilots
Faculty-Student TutorialsFaculty-recommended and
trained peer tutorsPeer-Lead Team Learning &
Learning AssistantsScheduled Tutoring in all subjects
On-line Learning Support
LEARNING SUPPORTLEARNING SUPPORTStudy Groups
Drop-in Tutoring:Math
Writing and Reading ESL: CAI support
World Languages: CAI supportCommunication: video support
And We’re Using What We’ve Learned from
for example, The 1990’s Title 3 The WRAC Center The Math Lab Tutorials The Language Center The Bond and resulting transition spaces Administrative reorganization BSI and our new Title 3 FIGS
to get our ducks in a row.
By creating opportunities and needs for instructors and programs to stay in touch
By developing a Center for Teaching and Learning
By funding Faculty Inquiry Groups And, through the peer tutor selection and
training program
LEARNING CONNECTION: TUTOR, PLTL LEADER, LEARNING ASSISTANT, PEER ADVISOR TRAINING PROGRAM(S): 2008-09
TUTR 49ATutoring Theory and
Practice: ALL TUTORS, PLTL’S,
LA’S (Tutor Training
ProgramCoordination)
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREALIFE SCIENCES
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREAWORLD
LANGUAGES
TUTR 49-02PEER ADVISOR
TRAINING
PLTL LEADERSLEARNING
ASSTS. TRNG.
9 HOURS W/INSTR.
TUTR 49B.01CONTENT-
AREAPROJECT-
BASED
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREACHEMISTRY
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREASPEECH &
COMM.
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREAALL MATH
TUTR 49BCONTENT-
AREALANGUAGE
ARTS
Three Foundations For
Successful Coordination of Chabot College’s Learning Support and Center for Teaching and Learning Programs with One Another and with Divisions,
Departments, and Services
And by keeping up with evolving needs and insightssuch as
Three FoundationsThree Foundations
Coordinated Coordinated Learning ConnectionLearning ConnectionBUDGETBUDGET
CENTRAL SPACECENTRAL SPACELearning Support,Center for Teaching and Learning
DedicatedDedicatedADMINISTRATIVE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORTSUPPORTLearning Connection Learning Support & CTL,Library—Provide leadership to the campus community to plan, supervise, and evaluate all programs and services in the area for effectiveness, efficiency, and student success; Provide leadership on behalf of faculty for professional development…
Applause for us all as we continue our efforts to
strengthen our students’ foundations for success.