Register for one of six workshops

Transforming the Academic Advising Experience

Transforming the Academic Advising Experience will introduce the idea of purpose-driven academic advising while leaning into demands to meet the current career and employability needs of students. Participants will explore current trends in student motivation to attend college and learn about exemplary practices in approaches to academic advising from 2-year and 4-year institutions. In addition, participants will consider academic advising as an integrated activity and utilize this perspective to review their own curricular and co-curricular advising connections. Drawing on Gardner Institute scholarship and work, this session will help participants create plans for action associated with improving advising in the first and second-years of college.


Transforming Curricular Structures

Far too often, the curriculum is unintentionally designed in ways that prevent many students often first-generation and low-income students from ever progressing in their discipline and even college. During this 6-hour workshop, participants will engage with colleagues to examine systems, curricular complexity, policies, and practices related to programs of study and design a plan for improved outcomes based on evidence. Particular emphasis will be places on course and curricular structures that students experience during the first two years (60 semester credits) of college.


Transforming the Gateway Course Experience: Redesigning for Improved Teaching and Learning in the Gateway Course Experience

This track is designed to support faculty and staff who teach or will be teaching gateway courses, which comprise a significant portion of the foundational postsecondary experience for students. Gateway courses, once termed barrier courses, are, by definition, often foundational (lower-division or developmental courses that serve as a pathway to credit-bearing courses); high risk (courses that yield higher rates of D, F, W, or Incomplete grades); and have high enrollments within, as well as across, sections (as defined by the institution) (Koch, 2017). Participants will be guided to apply what they learn in the track, as well as in the related concurrent sessions, to create a personal plan for course (re)design.


Transforming the Second College Year: Designing for Student Success

The second year of college is all-to-often overlooked as a pivotal period in the college success and completion journey. Many educators erroneously believe that once students succeed in the first-year, they have it “all figured out.” Alas, Gardner Institute research shows that this is far from the truth. Drawing on scholarship such as Helping Sophomores Succeed (Jossey-Bass 2010), this track will provide information on assessment strategies, policies, and practices that institutions can intentionally connect the second-year experience with their first-year efforts so students can maintain momentum and thrive during the second year of college and, ultimately, beyond. 


Transforming the First College Year: Designing a First Year for the Students You Serve

This workshop will ask you to examine critically the experiences you are currently offering first-year students. How well is your first year working, for which students, and why? That is the foundation of your current institutional story. Facilitators will invite you to grapple with key questions and assist you in developing concrete ideas to improve the various components of your institution’s first year.

You will be asked to do some advance preparation in writing before this workshop by examining certain questions the facilitators will pose. This will enable you to take maximum advantage of what will transpire in the workshop. You will be provided information and inspiration from the facilitators and other participants. Pedagogies used will be both didactic and discussion based.

This workshop is designed to be meaningful for different types of educators—faculty, administrators, student affairs, and student success practitioners—who come from all levels of prior experience.


Transforming the Transfer Experience

Drawing on scholarship from the Gardner Institute’s recently published book, The Transfer Experience: A Handbook for Creating a More Equitable and Successful Postsecondary System and other national sources, track participants will deepen their understanding of ways to create and sustain transfer-sending or transfer-receptive cultures at their own institutions. Positive transfer cultures at institutions are essential to persistence and completion of transfer students. The participants will be guided to apply what they learn during the track to create a set of plans for one or more innovative transfer transformation actions that they will pursue at their own institutions following the event.        


Pre- Conference Workshops

Deans and Department Chairs Workshop

This half-day workshop for current and newly appointed deans and department chairs will focus on latest research; best practices ,and practical strategies for identifying and implementing lasting student success initiatives.


Student-Centered Teaching Approaches Workshop

In this workshop, we will foreground the student experience while we explore current topics in teaching, such as using artificial intelligence, designing for neurodiversity, and applying trauma-informed practices. Participants will leave the session with strategies, applicable to any course and modality, that are responsive to the needs of students today.


Transformation Workshop

Participants will be invited to engage in pre-reading, investigation of methodology, and work collaboratively to enhance their Transformation plans. This opportunity is designed to prime new and existing schools to treat any transformation work as an opportunity to improve systems and conduct rapid tests of their respective theories of change. Institutions will also share lessons learned and have time to engage in generative innovation focusing on their most immediate needs related to advancing transformation plans.

This workshop is for Institutions participating in  Transforming the Foundational Postsecondary Experience™ only.

  • Bridgewater State University
  • California State University- San Bernardino
  • Capital University
  • CUNY Queensborough Community College
  • Columbia College of Chicago
  • Emmanuel College
  • Louisiana State University 
  • Mary Baldwin University
  • Mississippi State University
  • Normandale Community College
  • Purdue University Global
  • University of Alaska Fairbanks
  • University of Alaska Southeast
  • University of New Orleans

The event begins at 8:30 a.m. on October 10 and ends by 5 p.m. on October 11th. 

Pre-Conference will be held on October 9, details to be announced.

Conference Registration Fee -

  • Early Bird (Ends July 15, 2024) - $715
  • After Early Bird- $775
  • Undergraduate and Full-time Graduate Students- $485 (Contact us for registration)


Pre- Conference Workshops October 9, 1- 5 pm

  • Deans and Department Chairs Workshop- $190
  • Student-Centered Teaching Approaches Workshop- $190
  • Transformation Workshop- $120


Hotel Room Rates - $229 a night - Click here to reserve your room 

Refund Policy: There will be no refunds given after August 15, 2024. All refunds will be subject to a 5% processing fee. Registration can be transferred to another participant before September 31st, no transfers will be allowed after that. Participants can switch tracks before August 15th pending availability, requests must be made in writing to [email protected].


For more information contact [email protected]

Registration

If you are registering a group, you will need know if they require special accommodations or have dietary preferences before registering.

  • Session is for Transforming the Foundational Postsecondary Experience™ Institutions Only

$0.00


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