Upcoming Presentations

Texas Dual Credit Alliance (TDCA) Conference

November 3–5, 2024
Baytown, TX

November 4, 8:30 a.m.–3:45 p.m. 

November 5,  8:30 a.m.–11:45 p.m. 

Hyatt Regency Baytown - Houston (100 Convention Center Way)

Researchers from the Community College Research Center (CCRC) will partner with the Texas Dual Credit Alliance to deliver their inaugural conference focused on improving students' access to and success in dual credit in the state of Texas. Over the course of two days, CCRC researchers will help lead participating community college, K12, and university dual enrollment leaders in learning about CCRC's research-based dual enrollment equity pathways (DEEP) framework. Participants will engage in discussion, activities, and planning with the goal of helping them to implement dual credit so that more high school students in Texas can leverage dual enrollment for college and career success.

Presenters

John Fink, Senior Research Associate and Program Lead, CCRC

Aurely Garcia Tulloch, Senior Research Assistant, CCRC

Sarah Griffin, Research Associate, CCRC

Davis Jenkins, Senior Research Scholar, CCRC

AAC&U 2024 Transforming STEM Higher Education Conference

Embedding Culturally Relevant Instructional Supports for Self-Directed Learning in Online College STEM Courses

November 9, 2024
9:15–10:15 AM

Many college students are still honing their skills for managing their learning, but instructors can assist them. Guided by a researcher and a practitioner, this session focuses on instructional strategies to bolster students' abilities to motivate and manage their learning processes--referred to as self-directed learning skills in online STEM courses. Presenters will share theoretical, empirical, and practitioner-focused perspectives to cultivate motivation and manage learning processes. They will delve into creating inclusive environments, addressing emotional and metacognitive barriers, that foster skill development. Through both small and whole group discussions, participants will collaborate and learn from one another. The session revolves around these core questions:

  1. How can instructors integrate SDL support in online courses?
  2. How do contextual factors and students' experiences influence SDL skill development?
  3. What support is necessary to implement SDL strategies effectively?

By addressing these questions, instructors can enhance students' abilities to navigate their learning journeys effectively. 

Presenters

Akilah Thompson, Senior Research Assistant, CCRC

Krystal Thomas, Senior Education Researcher, SRI Education

Wanda Velez, Coordinator, Biology Instructor, Virginia State University

League for Innovation in the Community College

Beyond Engagement: Evidence-Based Strategies for Improving Learning Online

Date & Time TBD

Students and faculty both encounter challenges in the online environment. These challenges frequently manifest and are understood in terms of low student engagement. In this session, researchers and community college faculty will present a specific and actionable framework to bolster students’ abilities to remain motivated and manage their learning processes in online courses. The presenters refer to these mutually reinforcing mindsets and behaviors as self-directed learning (SDL) skills and they include motivational processes (e.g., self-efficacy), metacognitive processes (e.g., planning), and applied learning processes (e.g., help seeking). Presenters will describe a set of evidence-based instructional strategies to support SDL developed in collaboration with instructors at broad-access institutions. Speakers will share research findings on how the strategies have been implemented in postsecondary online STEM courses and their effect on student outcomes. A community college faculty member will share their experience implementing the strategies in an online biology course.

Presenters

Ellen Wasserman, Research Associate, CCRC

Allystair Jones, Department Chair, Science & Professor of Biology, Odessa College

Keena Walters, Education Research Associate, SRI Education

Who Do First-generation Students Turn to for Support? Research Findings and a Practitioner Perspective

The Community College Research Center, in partnership with Michigan State University, is conducting a longitudinal study exploring the personal support networks of first-generation students. Researchers will provide an overview of research findings, including the network size and composition of first-generation student participants from the first round of survey data collection. California State University Fullerton career services staff will describe programming designed to serve first-generation students at their institution.

Participants

Research Associate
Community College Research Center
Senior Research Associate
Community College Research Center

Associated Project(s)