Post on 18-Dec-2015
California Intersegmental Articulation Council
Conference2011
University of California“Articulation Outside
the Box”
With funding from the California Department of Education,UCOP is creating an online resource for counselors who advise high school students taking community college courses for high school credit.
The resource will consist of course lists from each college, showing which “a-g” high school subject requirement their courses satisfy.
College course lists will be added on UC’s high school articulation website, Doorways – not on ASSIST.
Introducing the Community College “A-G” Project (AB
876)
An act to add Section 66205.7 to the Education Code
The request: “…develop an online resource that lists the academic and technical courses offered at each of the 109 community colleges in this state that, when completed by high school students, satisfy one of the subject area requirements of the ‘a-g’ admission requirements to the University of California”
Assembly Bill 876
For high school students:
High school students will benefit because they and their counselors can more easily plan college coursework knowing which courses will clear UC’s “a-g” subject requirements for freshman admission
For counselors:
High school and community college counselors will benefit because the course lists take the guesswork out of choosing courses that satisfy the UC subject requirements
Why the Community College “A-G” Project is Needed
For freshman admission, high school seniors must complete the following coursework: the “a-g” Subject Requirements:
History/Social Science (a) – 2 years requiredEnglish (b) – 4 years requiredMathematics (c) – 3 years required; 4 years recommendedLaboratory Science (d) – 2 years required; 3 years recommendedLanguage Other than English (e) – 2 years required; 3 years recommendedVisual & Performing Arts (f) – 1 year requiredElective (g) – 1 year required
“a-g” Subject Requirements at a Glance
The “a-g” project will consist of at least two phases.
In the first phase:• Courses are assigned “a-g” categories – since March 2011, about 35% of
California community college reviews have been completed
• UCOP database administrators create the new pages for Doorways (March-June 2011), handling thousands of community college courses
• The online resource will go live by July 1, 2011
“A-G” Project Phase I: Create the Database
Review process starts with the TCA list of UC-transferable courses from ASSIST
UCOP course reviewers use the college catalog to determine which “a-g” category the courses satisfies
For high school credit, college-level courses must be UC-transferable and at least 3 semester units (meaning: 1- and 2-unit VPA courses, for example, do not satisfy the “f” requirement)
Community College “A-G” Project
(AB 876) Process for Phase I
Some differences between high school and college requirements:
• IGETC and UC Eligibility codes and “a-g” do not line up exactly. Examples: courses approved for IGETC area 3, Arts and Humanities, may be “f” Visual and Performing Arts or “g” History/Social Science
• “d” laboratory science courses must have corresponding labs (meaning: survey courses without labs are not “a-g”)
• “g” laboratory science courses outside the traditional major science areas of biology, chemistry, and physics but with labs can satisfy the “g” lab science elective (“g” examples: environmental science, geology, oceanography)
“A-G” Project Considerations
Doorways: The Home of the “A-G”
Online Resource (doorways.ucop.edu)
Doorways: The Search Begins Find course lists: Click on “School, Program and Community College”
Doorways: The Search Continues
Enter name of institution
Doorways: Results Page Click on name of institution
Course list for Santa Barbara City College: Courses arranged by “a-g” category
Doorways: CC Course List
Doorways’ course-list search is easy to navigate and use
High school articulation staff at UCOP maintain and support Doorways
Course lists are updated annually (by the high schools for their course lists, by UCOP for community college course lists) – in time for high school students to choose their courses
Doorways Highlights
“A-G” Project Phase II: High school-level courses
Review of nontransferable math and English courses will begin in fall 2011
• Catalog review
• “a-g” categories assigned and courses are added to online resource course lists with 2011-12 update cycle
Career Technical Education courses: High School and CCC
• The integration of academic content into high school CTE courses has allowed for a dramatic increase in approval of these courses for "a-g" credit. For the 2010-2011 school year, there were almost 10,000 UC-approved CTE courses on high school course lists. They include such diverse offerings as auto physics, marine biology, medical arts and sciences, and graphic design. (For more on high school CTE, see the Doorways website: http://www.ucop.edu/a-gGuide/ag/cte/)
• In the Community College “A-G” Project (AB 876), a small number of UC-transferable community college courses – about 5% of those reviewed thus far – have been identified as possibly allowable for CTE high school credit.
• These courses (examples: accounting, business administration, culinary arts) will be reviewed during Phase II of the “a-g” project with an eye toward approval for high school CTE credit.
Deborah McCaskey (project contact)Administrative Analyst, Student Affairs
Deborah.McCaskey@ucop.edu(510) 987-9437
Don Daves-RougeauxAssociate Director of Undergraduate Admissions, Articulation & Eligibility
Nina CostalesAdministrative Analyst, Student Affairs
Doorways staff contact: hsupdate@ucop.edu
UC Office of the PresidentCommunity College “A-G”
Project (AB 876) Staff
Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the state Legislature worked to reverse the under-funding of CTE, including providing grant funds for specific initiatives and pilot programs. Key priorities include:
o developing more and stronger CTE courses, especially in high-growth and emerging industry sections
o expanding student exposure to career options through apprenticeships, internships and training
o providing more professional development opportunities for CTE teachers and career counselors
CTE Initiatives and Related Policies
Administration of Justice Aviation Maintenance/Aviation Operations Child Development Computer Business Technology Criminal Justice Digital Media Direct Current Circuit Analysis/Direct Current Circuit Laboratory Emergency Medical Technology Fire Protection Technology Graphic Arts Introduction to Engineering Introduction to Geographic Information Systems Legal Assisting Military Studies
CCC Reported CTE Course Agreements
UC currently participates in approving CTE courses only at the high school level.
It would not be advisable to promise students that they will get any credit beyond high school “a-g.”
Community college articulation officers who are asked to sign CTE contracts using credit by exam as an avenue for UC transfer credit should be aware that UC does not guarantee that credit will be allowed for campus GE or major prep. UC transfer and IGETC credit should follow the same levels of scrutiny as courses taken outside community colleges.
Transcripts from a community college with CTE credit awarded will most likely be questioned at the campus level.
Concerns about using CTE for Transfer Credit
Estela Narrie◦ Articulation Officer◦ Santa Monica Community College
Lynn Fowler◦ Articulation Officer◦ Cosumnes River College
CCC Process and Perspective on CTE
Verify CCC faculty collaboration for credit-by-examination authorization before allowing CTE courses to be placed on your official transcripts as comparable to approved UC transfer courses
Exams should be taken at CCC facilities or with CCC faculty member involvement
CTE in Photography, at one CCC, has a pilot to give credit on portfolio review and oral test by the CCC department chair
Advise students that any identified CTE units may be awarded high school “a-g” credit only
Send questions regarding CTE credit to UCOP and UC campus articulation officers before signing agreements
Best Practices for CTE at the Transfer Level
Lynn FowlerCRC Articulation Officer
fowlerl@crc.losrios.edu(916) 691-7235
Estela NarrieSMC Articulation Officer
narrie_estela@smc.edu(310) 434-8557
Dawn SheibaniUC Transfer Admissions and CCC Articulation
Dawn.Sheibani@ucop.edu(510) 987-9569
Contacts for CTE Transfer Information
Statway, an initiative of the Carnegie Foundation, is focused on statistics, data analysis, and quantitative reasoning. Statway is designed as a yearlong pathway that culminates in college-level statistics.
Statway is structured especially to serve students who plan to transfer and continue further studies in humanities or social science
Participating colleges include: American River, Foothill, L.A. Pierce, Mt. San Antonio, and San Diego City
Statway Proposal
CSU has had a pilot program for 3 years
Positive discussions with UC faculty have occurred, but more materials are needed
UC BOARS members are being deliberate about this request because it affects all UC transferability and may serve as a gateway to additional policies affecting UC admission criteria
At this point, UC hopes to create a new permanent policy rather than to approve a pilot
Proposed Statway Policy Update
Elizabeth Atondo L.A. Pierce Articulation Officereatondo@piercecollege.edu
(818) 710-2516
Contacts for Statway Information