Students Achieve Their Educational Goals STUDENT TRANSFER AND SUCCESS
DEVELOPMENTAL STUDENT SUCCESS
CONTINUING EDUCATION STUDENTS
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Transfer and Economic Development Who are our Transfer Students? Do Transfer Students Succeed?
Average Annual Earnings by Degree Type – U.S.
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In 1991, the overall median income (adjusted for inflation) was $29,411. The median income with an Associate’s Degree was $38,965, or 132% of the overall median. The median income with a Bachelor’s degree was $47,565, or 161% of the overall median. In 2013, the overall median income (adjusted for inflation) was $32,179. The median income with an Associate’s Degree was $34,758 or 108% of the overall median. The median income with a Bachelor’s degree was $48,685, or 151% of the overall median. So while income for both the Associate’s degree and Bachelor’s degree holders has decreased relative to the median income since 1991, the change to the Associate’s degree holder median income is much more dramatic, and has been trending down for a number of years, the Bachelor’s degree holder median income has been much more steady. A Bachelor degree still exceed overall median income by >150%.
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Need WI Rank in Bachelor Attainment
“Upskilling”
Preference for Bachelor Degree Madison College District / Wisconsin
MC District Job Postings (2013) (min. H.S. Grad)
MC District % Jobs Require
BA/S
MC District % Adults With
BA/S or above
WI % Jobs Require BA/S
WI % Adults with BA/S
26,428 54% 32% 42% 26%
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Many positions formerly required AAS now require BAS Jobs more complex Employers more selective In MC District more position require BA/S or above (79% of IT openings) – Nursing openings, Business related openings, applied engineers…. WI Employers and Employees will benefit from an increase in Bachelor degree holders Especially critical in Dane County where Bachelor attainment rate is over 46%
Who are Our Transfer Students?
Student Clearing House Transfer Reports 2000 – 2014
Top 20 Transfer Colleges – 2012-13 First-time TransfersRank Top 20 Colleges Transfers Transfer %
1 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MADISON 752 26.20%2 EDGEWOOD COLLEGE 231 8.10%3 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - WHITEWATER 160 5.60%4 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MILWAUKEE 147 5.10%5 UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX 94 3.30%6 UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY 91 3.20%7 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PLATTEVILLE 79 2.80%8 GLOBE UNIVERSITY - MIDDLETON 74 2.60%9 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - OSHKOSH 71 2.50%
10 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - LA CROSSE 54 1.90%11 HERZING UNIVERSITY-MADISON 43 1.50%12 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - STEVENS POINT 42 1.50%13 CARDINAL STRITCH UNIVERSITY 35 1.20%14 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - STOUT 35 1.20%15 VITERBO UNIVERSITY 35 1.20%16 CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY- WISCONSIN 33 1.20%17 KAPLAN UNIVERSITY 33 1.20%18 ITT TECHNICAL INSTITUTE 32 1.10%19 LAKELAND COLLEGE 31 1.10%20 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - ONLINE 30 1.00%
Do Our Transfer Students Succeed?
Transfer Snapshots Success At UW
From:
First Time Fall Only 2011 Madison
# in Retained to 2nd Year College Cohort # % Comparison
UW Colleges Total 1,820 1,486 82% -2% UW 4-Year Total 2,243 1,676 75% 5%
WTCS Colleges: Blackhawk 48 31 65% 15%
Chippewa Valley 180 121 67% 13% Fox Valley 211 148 70% 10%
Gateway 120 81 68% 12% Lakeshore 60 39 65% 15%
Madison College 508 404 80% 0% Mid-State 79 46 58% 22%
Milwaukee Area 379 269 71% 9% Moraine Park 50 33 66% 14%
Demographics of Basic Skills Students in 2013-14 Age – 43.4% between 23 and 39; 37.0% 22 and under; 19.6% 40 and over Sex – 53.7% female Race – 54.8% minority; 24.2% Hispanic; 18.9% Black; 7.6% Asian; .5% American Indian
Performance funding for ABE transition is based on 3 years of Wisconsin Technical College System (WTCS) client reporting system data for adult students who: enrolled in at least 12 hours of instruction in Adult Basic Education (ABE), Adult Secondary Education (ASE), or English Language Learner (ELL) in 2012-13 and the previous two years and completed a post-secondary course with a grade of ‘C‘ or better in the same year or 1 year later. (aid codes 10, 20, 30, 31, 32, 50) The baseline performance funding was established using the 2010-11, 2011-12, and 2012-13 academic years. Madison College was 2nd of 16 WTCS colleges in the number of successful transitions to post-secondary coursework in the 3-year period. Madison College internal numbers of students meeting the criteria for transition exceed the official state figures. We are working with the WTCS State Office to reconcile the differences. Trends in transition by category are presented below. The total is a duplicated total which must be unduplicated to arrive at the number of successful transitioners used in the funding formula. 2013-14 figures will rise somewhat as students making a transition in the Spring of 2015 will count toward the 2013-14 total. At this writing the total number of transitioners is for 2013 is already the highest since 2010-11.
Building Bridges Nursing Assistant Bridge
Health Bridge
Math Chemistry Bridge
Bridge to Manufacturing
Bridge to Construction
IT Bootcamp
Under Construction:
Bridge to Biotech
Bridge to Transportation
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Wrap Around Services : 6 weeks of prep prior to CNA training with additional support during CNA course. 2 semester bridge consisting of adult basic ed and program pre-admission/prerequisite classes. This bridge leads to all the health programs. This is just the second semester of the Health Bridge but it also leads to any program that has a General Chem requirement (Vet Tech, Biotech, Fire). 4 week prep that leads to the Manufacturing programs 2 week prep that leads to Construction & Remodeling and Cabinet & Millwork programs this is a 1 week class to prepare the TAA CCCT Grant IT students for the Basic Microsoft Certificate courses
Codes WTCS definitions relating CE courses to aid codes: Continuing Education Vocational-Adult Aid Code 42 General Adult - Applies to educational offerings which contribute to basic education, citizenship and community safety for the general public. Aid Code 47 Occupational Adult - Applies to educational offerings with a definite vocational/technical objective which are designed to either provide future employment or upgrade individuals in their present occupations. Community Services Aid Code 60 - Applies to educational offerings that are leisure-time, self-enrichment activities including arts, crafts, games, hobbies, sports, recreation and foreign language conversation. Demographics of Continuing Education Students CE students differ demographically from credit students. Age – CE students are older than degree credit students. 50.5% of CE students in 2013-14 were over the age of 40. Sex – 50.0% of CE students are female, unlike credit students where females are 54.5% of students. Race – Race-ethnicity was not known for 15.6% of CE students in 2013-14. Of those students for whom race-ethnicity was known, 10.6% students were racial-ethnic minorities. Hispanic students were the largest minority with 4.7%. Education – 85% of CE students have a Bachelors degree or higher. Employment – 70-75% are employed or looking. 20% are not looking for work due to retirement.
Continuing Education Strategies Focus on Skill-Building and Professional Development
Students can earn a recognized credential
College touches more District residents ◦ Madison College serves 31.6% of all Community Services students in Wisconsin
Become financially sustainable
Madison College Continuing Education Current Digital Badges Healthcare Badges Technology Badges
Culinary Badges
Business Badges
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Assessment of non-credit learning outcomes Employer needs Non-credit to credit pathway Major program shift 2008 – 2010 professional development Competition
Revenue Generation
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Madison College began moving CE courses to a revenue-generating model in 2008-09. This was a purposeful effort to expand the scope and sustainability of CE both in skill building and enrichment courses. The initial effort began in Dane county. Growth in CE courses offered using the revenue-generating model has been very rapid and has been so successful that all CE courses outside of Health and Human and Protective Services in Dane county are now offered using this model. Additional growth in CE is expected in Dane County as further needs are identified and served in both skill-building and enrichment areas. The college is now expanding the revenue generating model to the North and East regions. Growth in these regions is expected as the college responds to the unique circumstances in the local communities. Average gross margin for these courses is 35% overall. Gross margin of 40-45% on enrichment courses has allowed the college to offer skill building courses that generate a lower than average margin. Growth in skill-building courses are enhanced by the awarding of Digital Badges, facilitated using a partnership with Pearson Acclaim. These Badges document skill acquisition and are useful both to students and employers. Awarding of badges also allows the college to track the usefulness of the skill training it provides via non-credit courses. A further benefit of sustainable CE offerings has been in re-packaging and delivering curriculum originally developed for degree credit programs. This has allowed the college to continue to offer skill building content previously offered in programs that have been suspended for various reasons. Examples include the Dietary Manager and Health Care Interpreter programs whose content is now available as continuing education courses.