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mdparrinello

Colorado Dept. of Higher Ed: Remedial Education - 2 views

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    This article discusses Colorado state public education changes slated to go into effect Fall 2014 after legislation passed concerning developmental education. Some of the changes include accepting multiple forms of testing for dev ed placement and allowing supplemental instruction in place of traditional developmental coursework.
mdparrinello

Connecticut State PA 12-40 - 2 views

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    This is a copy of Connecticut's Public Act 12-40, which mandates the way that remedial education is delivered to students, focusing on a tiered approach that prioritizes embedded (supplemental instruction) coursework followed by accelerated, intensive coursework before the start of the school year. These changes are to go into effect Fall 2014.
kwavering

Early success for Colorado's broad set of remedial reforms @insidehighered - 0 views

    • kwavering
       
      Interesting...linking success to financial aid.  Could address those students who continue to "repeat" a course.
  • Supplemental Academic Instruction,” it lets students with remedial needs take credit-bearing, gateway courses. They also get mandatory academic supports, such as tutoring, peer-study sessions and extra class time.
  • ostly open-door admission
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • developed new placement methods aimed at identifying students who are likely to succeed in college-level courses.
    • kwavering
       
      I'd like to know more about their assessment practices. 
  • additional assessments.
  • non-credit lab for mathematics and a one-credit English add-on.
  • students in supplemental academic instruction courses are outperforming their peers
  • state-mandated standards for K-12 that are better aligned with college placement requirements. The state has also had success with GEAR UP, a federally funded program that the Clinton administration created. It targets low-income students in middle and high schools, offering intensive advising, dual enrollment and college preparation courses.
Christine Padberg

Academics: Reading and Writing Together - 1 views

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    Hobart & William Smith Colleges' approach to IRW
Christine Padberg

http://www.pearsonhighered.com/showcase/johnson-sheehan/assets/ch11.pdf - 4 views

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    Text chapter on position papers
mdparrinello

Remediation If You Want It - 2 views

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    This article discusses Florida bill SB 1720 which passed last year and grants all students graduating from an accredited high school the right to refuse developmental classes and enter directly into credit-bearing courses regardless of test scores.
mdparrinello

Reading and Writing for Understanding (Harvard Graduate School for Education) - 2 views

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    This is from Citrus Bb site. The old link didn't work, and it won't let me delete it, so please refer to this one. Sorry!
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    Thanks for updating the link! The delete option is under the "More" tab. I deleted the old version.
mdparrinello

Central Michigan: Formed Teams or Discussion Groups to Facilitate Learning - 2 views

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    Another Citrus Bb link. This one focuses on how using teams or discussion groups helps students learn.
Christine Padberg

ALP at CCBC - 1 views

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    Acceleration at Comm Coll of Baltimore
Christine Padberg

Integrated Reading and Writing Courses - 7 views

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    Chabot College's accelerated English course is one of the longest running accelerated models nationwide. Students who do not meet the minimum Accuplacer scores for college English have two choices for their developmental coursework.
Christine Padberg

Who Gets to Graduate? - NYTimes.com - 4 views

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    Wow. What a powerful article. It made me think of a lot of different things that aren't necessarily directly connected: 1) The early discussion of how access doesn't always mean success makes me think of the "Right to Fail" movement and the discussion of open access policies. While our statistics may show us that large percentages of students who test below a certain threshold will not pass, what about those who test below that threshold and do pass? The movement is about making sure students have the right to attempt courses even when our test measures say they won't succeed, thus the "right to fail" those courses. It's been both an empowering and a dismissive slogan in these conversations. 2) The discussion about the articles that made students feel like they belonged and were less alone made me think about a reading I always have my dev ed writing students read. Anne Lamott's essay "Shitty First Drafts" does a great job of dispelling some myths about the ease of the writing process, and students really seem to enjoy it. (http://wrd.as.uky.edu/sites/default/files/1-Shitty%20First%20Drafts.pdf) 3) The theme that keeps coming up again and again in these success stories for me is that the teachers actually respect their students' intellectual abilities and trust them with actual hard work.
Christine Padberg

Find OER | Open Professionals Education Network - 1 views

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    This is the link Dennis sent to our group.  I also used this resource quite a bit in building our current ALA.
mdparrinello

CCCSE: The Heart of Student Success - 6 views

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    This is another link from the Citrus Bb site. This is most helpful in that it discusses the way that raised standards help students succeed and that research suggests many students are not succeeding because they aren't being asked to reach high enough expectations.
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