Complete the Agenda in Higher Education: Challenge Beliefs about Student Success
By (Author) Lee Ann Nutt
By (author) Latoya Hardman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
12th January 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
Educational administration and organization
378.197
Paperback
156
Width 161mm, Height 231mm, Spine 12mm
245g
Complete the Agenda in Higher Education: Challenge Beliefs about Student Success is a bold call to action to do more than just improve college completion rates. This book is for community college board members, administrators, faculty and staff who also want to: (1) foster beliefs that will enable students to finish what they start; (2) empower students to overcome daily challenges and real adversity; and (3) transform human potential into achievement, for a lifetime.
Courageous educators, foundations, associations and researchers made community colleges better than we were a decade ago. Completion rates have improved somewhat as a result, but too many students still do not finish because the Completion Agenda is incomplete.
This book describes compelling reasons why a shift from a completion-only-mindset to the Beliefs Agenda (completion with GRIT) is critical for the future of America. It provides practical implementation methods, offers engaging teaching tactics, and proposes sensible strategies.
In their book, published by Rowman & Littlefield, Dr. Nutt and Ms. Hardman take on a timely and crucial topic in higher education that challenges the status quo. Now, their nationally recognized ideas and innovative approaches, which have been field-tested at their community college, could very well be an answer to one of the nations most important and on-going educational concerns. * PRWeb *
Complete the Agenda in Higher Education: Challenge Beliefs About Student Success reminds us that meeting our students where they are and strategically assisting them in the process of improving their academic and life skills, is both a science and an art. Odessa Colleges practices behind the Drop Rate Improvement Program, a pivot to eight-week courses, and supplying Student Success Coaches for all students aligns with the concepts outlined in this text. By shifting our culture to focusing on our students successful outcomes, our students have been able to make significant academic improvements. -- Gregory D. Williams, PhD, president, Odessa College, Aspen Prize Top 10 Community College
Dr. Lee Ann Nutt is a true leader in the design and implementation of a successful GRIT program for college students. Working collaboratively with faculty and administrators, LSC-Tomball has infused GRIT training and learning up, down, and across the curriculum with measurable results. I've personally witnessed Dr. Nutt's vision come to fruition over only a few years-which is lightning speed for large scale institutional change in academia! The practical recommendations, rooted in her own personal experience, make this a timely and useful read for anyone interested in improving student success and outcomes. With all the current research centered on the future of skills, this couldn't have come at a better time. -- Leah Jewel, managing director, career development and employability, Pearson
After a decade of the Completion Agenda, most researchers and higher education leaders agree that student completion has not improved to the desired success level. Lee Ann Nutt advocates that it is time for the next disruptive change in higher education. Complete the Agenda in Higher Education: Challenge Beliefs About Student Success posits that college cultures must move from a Completion Agenda to a Belief Agenda. At the core of the Belief Agenda is the acknowledgement that experiences and beliefs underlie why some students finish despite the obstacles they face and why some students cannot finish anything, including an assignment. -- Martha M. Ellis, director of higher education strategy, policy, and services, Charles A. Dana Center, University of Texas at Austin
Lee Ann Nutt, Latoya Hardman, and their colleagues at Lone Star College-Tomball have set their sights on big goals for their students, many of whom struggle with a variety of obstacles and adversity. In bringing GRIT, a construct developed by Dr. Paul G. Stoltz, to their college, they are changing the school culture and changing the lives of their students in a positive way. Lone Star College's implementation of a carefully designed "GRIT initiative has transformed instructional practices and classroom/campus environments to help students recognize the nature and value of GRIT and to actually grow it intentionally and purposefully. Through this work, students are empowered to persist-- resiliently, tenaciously, and creatively--as they seek to realize their goals and aspirations. Pearson colleagues and I, who have been involved in a partnership with Lone Star College-Tomball to support such changes, are not merely impressed with their results but thrilled to see the caliber of students emerging from the college and creating better futures for themselves.
In his famous Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, American novelist William Faulkner offered his view on the future of mankind: "I believe mankind will not only endure, he will prevail." Thanks to this new vision of how to support students, not just in learning necessary concepts and technical skills but also in developing the capabilities to aspire to great goals and to focus unwaveringly on achieving them, however difficult, Lone Star College-Tomball's students will not just survive: in a challenging and uncertain world, they will "prevail."
Dr. Lee Ann Nutt serves as president of Lone Star College-Tomball, and she is an adjunct faculty member in Ferris State Universitys Doctorate in Community College Leadership program. Dr. Nutt strongly believes in the capacity of the human spirit to overcome adversity, and she is deeply committed to helping others do whatever it takes to achieve their worthy goals.
Latoya Hardman Lewis began teaching in 2004 as a high school English teacher, and in 2011 she transitioned to higher education to teach Development English, First Year Experience, and Education courses. Currently, she serves as the Director of Academic Initiatives and Partnerships at Lone Star College-Tomball and oversees the colleges Global Grit Initiative. Latoya is passionate about teaching faulty how to help students develop their 21st century literacy skills and equipping instructors to deliver technology-rich and engaging lessons.