ISBN-13: 9781642673609 / Angielski / Twarda / 2022
ISBN-13: 9781642673609 / Angielski / Twarda / 2022
The goal of Delivering on the Promise of High-Impact Practices is to provide examples from around the country of the ways educators are advancing equity, promoting fidelity, achieving scale, and strengthening assessment of their own local high-impact practices.
“Privileging students who would benefit most from HIPs is the final shift I am calling for here. A middle-class student who routinely traveled internationally with family members for several years prior to enrolling in college would probably benefit less from an overseas study abroad experience than would a lower-income classmate who has never been on an airplane. Ideally, every student would have full access to HIPs, but few campuses have the capacity and resources to offer these experiences to everyone. Hence, I insist on placing students who are not typically engaged in HIPs at the front of the line and making every strategic effort to connect them with these experiences. That would be equity.
This new book is another incredibly useful contribution to the student engagement and assessment literature. Inequity is our past and present. We must embrace the shifts I have presented here to deliver on the promise of a more equitable future."
From the epilogue by Shaun R. Harper, University of Southern California
"Whether one is an enthusiastic advocate of High Impact Practices or in the “I’d like more evidence, please” camp, Delivering on the Promise of High-Impact Practices is the book to read now. Taking an equity-focused approach to interpreting research on HIPs, this book answers – and asks – questions about how these practices might be done with fidelity and at scale to improve educational outcomes for all students. It sets an agenda for the third decade of HIP implementation and assessment."
Kristen A. Renn, PhD, Mildred B. Erickson Distinguished Chair and Professor of Higher Education, Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies for Student Success Research, Michigan State University
“Universities are waking up to their kuleana. Institutional leaders, including those of us in educational development, need to read, reflect on, and discuss the chapters of this book with the aim of centering equity in HIPs – of (re)assessing and (re)imagining HIPs, and creating new entry points for historically marginalized and excluded students. It’s time to be equity-minded educators and, as Shaun Harper writes, this means strategically moving some students to the front of the line.”
Fay Yokomizo Akindes, Director, Office of Professional & Instructional Development (OPID), University of Wisconsin System
“Our ability to give students a valuable college experience requires us to provide the instruction, programs, services, and connections that will prepare them for their myriad future goals. High impact practices, when delivered equitably and effectively across an institution, can ensure students are ready for the complex challenges that await them. This collection of discussions from national experts is a perfect guide for institutions that seek a robust strategy for providing the high impact practices that students need and deserve.”
Amelia Parnell, Ph.D., Vice President for Research and Policy, NASPA – Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education
“Thoughtful. Timely. Courageous. This book addresses many of the critical issues that higher ed leaders must address, including the need to scale up HIPs and the equity imperative. Moreover, this book provides much needed clarity on the evolution of high impact practices while highlighting measurement and evaluation as critical steps for implementation.”
Michael T. Stephenson, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Sam Houston State University
Acknowledgements Introduction—John Zilvinskis, Jillian Kinzie, Jerry Daday, Ken O'Donnell, and Carleen Vande Zande Part 1. Advancing Equity 1. Designing Equity-Centered High-Impact Practices— Ashley Finley, Tia McNair, and Alma Clayton-Pedersen 2. Mapping the Connections of Validation and High-Impact Practices —Adrianna Kezar, Ronald E. Hallett, Joseph A. Kitchen, and Rosemary J. Perez 3. Methodological Challenges of Studying High-Impact Practices for Minoritized Populations— Cindy Ann Kilgo 4:Promoting Equity by Design. Stacking HIPs for Faculty and Students in a First-Year Experience Program — Denise Bartell and Caroline Boswell 5. Intentionally Designing Learning Communities to Advance Authentic Access and Equity. Key Communities —Heather Novak, Taé Nosaka, and Ryan P. Barone Part 2. Assuring Fidelity 6. A Design Approach to Undergraduate Research for First-Year Students —William Loker and Thia Wolf 7. Themed Learning Communities and Service-Learning-Leveraged for Student Success— Michele J. Hansen and Thomas W. Hahn 8. Data Collection in Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experiences (CUREs). Best Practices and Lessons Learned—Sara Z. Evans and Jocelyn Evans 9. Internships for All? How Inequitable Access to Internships Hinders the Promise and Potential of HIPs and Work-Based Learning—Matthew T. Hora 10. Living Up to the Capstone Promise. Improving Quality, Equity, and Outcomes in Culminating Experiences—Caroline J. Ketcham, Anthony G. Weaver, Jessie L. Moore, and Peter Felten 11. Identity and Community amongst First-Generation Students. High-Impact Practices and Communicating Belonging Throughout Development Design—Adrienne Viramontes and Theresa Castor Part 3. Achieving Scale 12. High-Impact Practices and Equity. Pathways to Student Success in General Education Courses at a Large Urban Community College—Dallas M. Dolan, Jennifer Kilbourne, Monica Walker, and Glenda Breaux 13. Documenting High-Impact Practices in Institutional Data—Pam Bowers and Lara Ducate 14. Required Experiential Learning. Cultural Change and Commitment to Student Success—Jon C. Neidy, Kelly McConnaughay, Jennifer Gruening Burge 15. Increasing Student Access and Learning in Employment and Internship Experiences—Joe O’Shea, Myrna Hoover, and James Hunt 16. HIPs in the curriculum. Implementing and Assessing a HIP Course-Designation Program—Bradley Wilson, Brian Danielson, Jason Hilton, and Kevin McCarthy 17. Using Assessment Data to Expand Access to HIPs for Every Student—Kimberly Yousey-Elsener and Kirsten Pagan 18. Tracking HIP Participation and Student Success with Fidelity Across a Community College System—Heidi Leming Part 4. Assessing Outcomes 19. High-Impact Practice Connections as Catalysts for Equitable Retention—Meena C. Naik, Adam N. Wear, Scott Peecksen, Regina Branton, and Mike Simmons 20. Measurement and Evaluation of HIPs within a Centralized Model— Rasha Qudisat and Frederick H. White 21. Using Propensity Score Matching to Assess High Impact Practices Outcomes—Angela Byrd, Heather Haeger, Wendy Lin, A. Sonia Ninon, and Steven S. Graunke Afterword. The HIPs Just Keep Coming!—George D. Kuh Epilogue—Shaun Harper Editor and Contributors Biographies Volume Index Table Index
John Zilvinskis is an assistant professor at Binghamton University, State University of New York. By training, he is a survey researcher who studies the engagement of college students and his research has been published in Research in Higher Education, The Review of Higher Education, the Journal of College Student Development and the Journal of Diversity in Higher Education.
Jillian Kinzie is Associate Director of the Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research and the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) Institute. She is also a senior scholar with the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) project.
Jerry Daday is a professor of sociology and the executive associate dean in the Institute for Engaged Learning at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. He works with a team of faculty and staff striving to ensure the equitable progression of IUPUI’s 20,000 undergraduate students through pathways of scaffolded engaged learning experiences beginning in the first-year experience through their capstone experience.
Ken O’Donnell is vice provost and professor of communication at California State University Dominguez Hills. He has been an energetic proponent of high-impact practices since working at the CSU Office of the Chancellor, where he successfully won several million dollars in public and philanthropic funding to support HIPs implementation and assessment across California.
Carleen Vande Zande is the associate vice president for academic programs and faculty advancement at the University of Wisconsin System Administration. She is also a tenured professor of educational leadership at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. She has facilitated HIPs development activities at the campus and system levels for several years and is interested in ways to integrate HIPs into student success strategies as well as incorporating HIPs into university level assessment.
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