Monroe County Community College among first to set up Student Success Academy

Monroe County Community College
Monroe County Community College

Monroe County Community College is among the first institutions to complete the Higher Learning Commission’s newest program, the Student Success Academy.

Eighteen U.S. colleges and universities recently completed the program, which provides guidance and a framework for improving student success.

“A data-informed program, the Student Success Academy led the inaugural group of institutions to reflect on data, resources, priorities and past decision-making in order to come up with a new strategic approach to enhancing student outcomes,” Laura Janota, public information officer for the commission, said. “From nine states and multiple sectors – including private, public, for-profit, a seminary, a college nursing school, as well as tribal and community colleges - the institutions worked with mentors and scholars in exploring one of higher education’s biggest challenges – how to respond when students are left behind in reaching their higher-education goals.”

“The first thing participants learn in HLC’s Student Success Academy is the importance of defining what student success means in a way that reflects institutional mission and the educational intentions of students,” Barbara Gellman-Danley, president of HLC, said.

From there, HLC’s Academy helps institutions identify numerous gaps in information, service and performance that need to be addressed if they are going to be able to support equitable student outcomes.

This system-wide view and approach to addressing student success led some of the colleges and universities to discover they were not as familiar with their student populations as they had thought. Others found they were not doing effective outreach with the students who needed it most. Still others learned that supporting their students’ success simply wasn’t a campus-wide effort.

Each institution graduated with a Student Success Plan for achieving better student outcomes and with planned improvement projects addressing shortcomings in policy, procedure and practice and supporting institutional priorities. Among initiatives being implemented are: targeted student success centers, permanent student-success teams/committees, program reviews of engagement initiatives and strategic interventions for reaching women and minority students.

“This program sparks new ways of thinking about and responding to challenges,” Gellman-Danley said. “We look forward to the continuing work of our inaugural graduates, whom we know can be leaders in designing practical models that can improve student outcomes.”

The next cohort of the Student Success Academy begins in the fall.

The Higher Learning Commission accredits approximately 1,000 colleges and universities. It is a private, nonprofit accrediting agency recognized by the U.S. Department of Education and the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

This article originally appeared on The Monroe News: MCCC completes Student Success Academy setups