Building community among our faculty is very important for us to function as a disconnected group of disciplines that must come
together cohesively to address systemic problems such as student retention and
success. Part of our jobs as faculty has always been to focus on the needs of
our students. Whether it is showing your students how to annotate, suggesting
better study skills, or advising them about time management, when we take the
time to teach students how to navigate college, we are also helping our
colleagues. If a student learns a valuable college success skill in one class,
we all benefit. So as the landscape continues to shift and the opportunity to
attend college is an option for more students, we know that the number of underprepared
student will continue to grow. Here are a few suggestions that you can use to
create a stronger foundation for students who are faced with multiple
impediments. Suggest during your advising sessions that taking the College
Success Skills course provides a solid orientation for surviving and prospering
in college. When you notice students are struggling, whether by formative or
summative assessment or simply through observation in your classes, suggest that
they make a trip to the Academic Learning Center. Make sure you send them with
a referral sheet. Once they have made their visit, have them return the
referral sheet to you so that you can see what intervention was offered and
what the ALC professional staff suggests as the next step. The entire process
can be viewed on the ALC website. The most important thing in this situation is
to talk with your students who are struggling. A high level of engagement,
often marked by the student-faculty relationship, is key to improving student
success.
THE VALUE OF COMMUNITY COLLEGES
THE VALUE OF COMMUNITY COLLEGES
LCTCS President Joe May recently had a guest editorial published by The Advocate. In trumpeting the merits of the community college
experience, Dr. May uses one of our own BRCC student’s story to make his point.
He says, “Students who often choose to enroll in community colleges value their
low cost, easy access, small class size, and high quality instruction that
aligns with the needs of the local economy. Many of these students, such as
Laketa Smith at Baton Rouge Community College, acknowledge that many of their
previous education and career choices were not in their long-term best
interest. Laketa, like a great number of students, needed developmental
education in reading to help her prepare for college-level courses. As the
result of her developmental education courses, she is successfully enrolled in
honors courses at BRCC. At the same time, she not only saved herself money she
saved the state of Louisiana as well.”
END OF SEMESTER SUGGESTIONS
END OF SEMESTER SUGGESTIONS
As you begin to create your final exams, I would encourage
you to use the comprehensive approach. What we know about the brain and
learning is that it requires prompts and redundancy in order to create deeper
learning. Repeating questions from your past quizzes and tests is a good idea,
especially if a high number of students did not demonstrate mastery on the
previous assessment. You should also be looking to see if the students are
using the feedback you have provided them by assessing their ability to
integrate changes and new knowledge. Test anxiety is a very real impediment for
many of your students. Positive messaging and confidence building are two key components
to allowing your students to give you their best effort. Encourage them to
build study guides individually and then allow them some class time to share
their efforts with other students in the class. The sum is always greater than
the parts when it comes to knowledge. Finally, you may want to have each of
your students bring in a self-addressed stamped envelope. That way you can send
them feedback on their final exam. You could also email this information or
create a general feedback document that you could post to your Blackboard site.
This allows us to continue to scaffold the knowledge they learned this semester
and connect it to new knowledge in the semesters to come.
THE HONOR CIRCLE EXPANDS
THE HONOR CIRCLE EXPANDS
Join us in congratulating Dr. Sandra Guzman as the most
recent recipient of the Keep Calm and Be Engaged shirt of honor. Watching Dr.
Guzman in her classroom is an inspiring experience. Her love of both teaching
and her discipline is readily obvious. She is a big proponent of active
learning and making sure that her assessment instruments are aligned with her
teaching. Dr. Guzman is also a disciple of Bloom’s Taxonomy and champions its
worth to her colleagues. As a biologist, she is concerned about the environment
and shares her passion with her students in this area as well. Her students
tell us she is tough but caring. They also say that she is able to take a difficult
topic and relate it to their lives in ways that help them learn and make
connections to previous knowledge. So we welcome Dr. Guzman to the Keep Calm
and Be Engaged honor circle where she joins previous recipients Paul Guidry,
Wes Harris, Dr. Mary Miller, and Amy Pinero.