The California Dream Act: AB 540, AB 130, and AB 131

FCC Dream Center
November 1, 2016
Presented by Dr. Carole Goldsmith
 
Combination of three bills: AB 540,
    AB 130, and AB 131
Allows undocumented and nonresident,
documented students to be treated the
same as resident students
Pay resident fees
Receive private scholarship, state
financial aid,  fee waivers and state-
sponsored Cal Grants
California Dream Act
 
Opened in September 2015
Originally designed to provide
information and academic
counseling to new and continuing
undocumented students at Fresno
City College
Service delivery focused on a
   walk-in model
FCC Dream Center
 
Two part-time counselors were assigned
to Dream Center
Focus on assisting students with
challenges so they may successfully
complete career or transfer goals
Majority of the students served are
identified as Dreamers, Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) or seeking
AB 540 status
FCC Dream Center
 
Since its inception in September 2015,
the Dream Center has served 213 FCC
enrolled students, 33 interested
individuals and held over 600 counseling
appointments.
Nearly all students served by the Dream
Center are Hispanic (99%)
FCC Dream Center
FCC Dream Center –
Student Demographics (n=213)
 
Gender
 
Age
 
More females visited
Dream Center
 
More younger students visited
Dream Center (80% 24 or under)
FCC Dream Center Students– Top Majors
 
15 Dream Center students received
degrees/certificates during 2015-16
FCC Dream Center Student
Achievement – GPA
 
We compared students who came to Dream Center
(n=213) vs. students who marked AB540 on application
but did not come to the Dream Center (n=1,454)
The difference is statistically significant (p<0.01) with a
small effect size
FCC Dream Center Student
Achievement – Course Success
 
Dream Center students also had a higher successful
course completion rate (earning A, B, C, or Passing)
than the comparison group
 
The difference
is statistically
significant
(p<0.01) with
a small effect
size.
FCC Dream Center Student
Achievement – Course Retention
 
Dream Center students also had a slightly higher
course retention rate (% of students stayed in the
class to the end of term) than the comparison group
 
The difference
is statistically
significant
(p<0.05) but
the effect size
is too small.
FCC Dream Center – Monthly
Visits (duplicated)
Source: Dream Center sign-in sheets
Lacking efficient data collection
Integrate student appointment
reservation system - SARS
Work with IR to improve tracking
Create internal information sharing
Establish a formal code for Dreamers
in college data management system-
Ellucian
Lessons Learned
Initial focus was limited and
Place-bound
Research has shown that follow-up
services are needed for sustainable
success
Staff has now changed service
delivery to include follow-up
Host workshops
Lessons Learned
Missing coordinated outreach plan
Focus on existing Dreamers
Connect with existing programs
Work with PIO to develop an
awareness campaign using social
media
Recruit undocumented students to
serve as mentors
Lessons Learned
Designate a Champion
Intentionally connect institutional
goals with Dream Center goals
Use an intrusive advising model
Mobilize student leaders
Continue to evaluate and implement
Lessons Learned
Pathway to Improvement
Thank for your attention…
Questions?
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Dr. Carole Goldsmith from FCC Dream Center presented on the California Dream Act, which comprises AB 540, AB 130, and AB 131. This Act allows both undocumented and nonresident, documented students to be treated similarly to resident students in terms of fee payments.

  • California Dream Act
  • AB 540
  • AB 130
  • AB 131
  • Resident Fees

Uploaded on Oct 11, 2024 | 1 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FCC Dream Center November 1, 2016 Presented by Dr. Carole Goldsmith

  2. California Dream Act Combination of three bills: AB 540, AB 130, and AB 131 Allows undocumented and nonresident, documented students to be treated the same as resident students Pay resident fees Receive private scholarship, state financial aid, fee waivers and state- sponsored Cal Grants Fresno City College

  3. FCC Dream Center Opened in September 2015 Originally designed to provide information and academic counseling to new and continuing undocumented students at Fresno City College Service delivery focused on a walk-in model Fresno City College

  4. FCC Dream Center Two part-time counselors were assigned to Dream Center Focus on assisting students with challenges so they may successfully complete career or transfer goals Majority of the students served are identified as Dreamers, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) or seeking AB 540 status Fresno City College

  5. FCC Dream Center Since its inception in September 2015, the Dream Center has served 213 FCC enrolled students, 33 interested individuals and held over 600 counseling appointments. Nearly all students served by the Dream Center are Hispanic (99%) Fresno City College

  6. FCC Dream Center Student Demographics (n=213) Age 35-39 1% Gender 40-49 1% 30-34 4% Unknown 1% 25-29 14% Male 42% 19 or less 36% Female 56% 20-24 44% More younger students visited Dream Center (80% 24 or under) More females visited Dream Center Fresno City College

  7. FCC Dream Center Students Top Majors Nursing / Registered RN 19 11 Engineering 11 Liberal Studies 10 Criminology - Law Enforcement 10 Biology 10 Business Administration for Transfer 8 Psychology for Transfer 8 Child Development 7 Administration of Justice for Transfer 7 Automotive Technology 15 Dream Center students received degrees/certificates during 2015-16 Fresno City College

  8. FCC Dream Center Student Achievement GPA 2.46 2.31 2.50 3.00 2.54 2.42 2.00 1.50 1.00 0.50 0.00 Fall 2015 Dream Center Students (n=213) Other AB540 Students (n=1,454) We compared students who came to Dream Center (n=213) vs. students who marked AB540 on application but did not come to the Dream Center (n=1,454) The difference is statistically significant (p<0.01) with a small effect size Spring 2016 Fresno City College

  9. FCC Dream Center Student Achievement Course Success 100% 78% The difference is statistically significant (p<0.01) with a small effect size. 74% 73% 80% 69% 60% 40% 20% 0% Fall 2015 Dream Center Students (n=213) Other AB540 Students (n=1,454) Dream Center students also had a higher successful course completion rate (earning A, B, C, or Passing) than the comparison group Spring 2016 Fresno City College

  10. FCC Dream Center Student Achievement Course Retention 93% 92% 100% 95% 93% 80% The difference is statistically significant (p<0.05) but the effect size is too small. 60% 40% 20% 0% Fall 2015 Dream Center Students (n=213) Other AB540 Students (n=1,454) Dream Center students also had a slightly higher course retention rate (% of students stayed in the class to the end of term) than the comparison group Spring 2016 Fresno City College

  11. FCC Dream Center Monthly Visits (duplicated) Source: Dream Center sign-in sheets Fresno City College

  12. Lessons Learned Lacking efficient data collection Integrate student appointment reservation system - SARS Work with IR to improve tracking Create internal information sharing Establish a formal code for Dreamers in college data management system- Ellucian Fresno City College

  13. Lessons Learned Initial focus was limited and Place-bound Research has shown that follow-up services are needed for sustainable success Staff has now changed service delivery to include follow-up Host workshops Fresno City College

  14. Lessons Learned Missing coordinated outreach plan Focus on existing Dreamers Connect with existing programs Work with PIO to develop an awareness campaign using social media Recruit undocumented students to serve as mentors Fresno City College

  15. Pathway to Improvement Designate a Champion Intentionally connect institutional goals with Dream Center goals Use an intrusive advising model Mobilize student leaders Continue to evaluate and implement Lessons Learned Fresno City College

  16. Thank for your attention Questions?

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#