Innovations Library

Search results ordered by: Relevance, Date Descending. Keyword search results do not display in date descending order.

Monique Umphrey October 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 10
Count all 224
In spring 2020, Austin Community College District (ACC) began to develop a blueprint for updating its Academic Master Plan (AMP) with recommendations that could be supported financially and poised for the “best possible outcomes in terms of student and community success” (Austin Community College District, n.d.-a, para. 1). The new AMP was the college’s opportunity to be bold in its strategy and approach.
Kathleen C. Cleary September 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 9
Count all 231
Employers across the U.S. are struggling to find the talent they need to thrive, while community colleges and other training providers are seeking innovative ways to recruit and educate students to meet this demand. Ohio To Work (OTW) was formed in 2021 to give Ohio job seekers access to resources and opportunities to land good jobs while filling the talent pipeline. The initiative is a partnership among employers, service providers, and training providers who are part of a network that helps workers to acquire the support they need.
Leslie Neal August 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 8
Count all 392
Ensuring that different voices are heard with equal weight across a college campus can be difficult, but well worth the effort. Arguably, from their inception in the early 1900s, community colleges were intentionally created for the purpose of diversifying the higher education student body; offering inclusivity to those who previously did not have the socioeconomic stature to attend an institution of higher education; and providing learning spaces that were deemed fair, accessible, and equitable (Nevarez & Wood, 2010; Ratcliff, 1986).
Caron Sada July 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 7
Count all 179
The Art and Science of Culture Change (ASCC) is a comprehensive change model made up of 31 themes, or concepts, that aim to describe and inform the co-creation of social contexts demonstrating inclusion, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Within ASCC, entrepreneurial leaders of change (ELCs) are described as “generous, courageous, and humble learners willing to take action” (Sada, 2022, para. 4), and they can be found in any organizational role, regardless of job title.
Jessica Crotty June 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 2
Count all 238
When Simon Sieczka stepped into the role of Financial Aid Coordinator at Moraine Valley Community College in March 2020, he wasn’t quite ready for the experience. In addition to the challenges of beginning a new job two weeks before the world shut down for the COVID-19 pandemic, he was now the only supervisor of unfamiliar people in an unfamiliar place. “In my prior position, I only supervised a few work-study students, so it was quite challenging to come into a role overseeing 10 employees and three work-study students by myself,” Sieczka said.
George R. Boggs, Charlene M. Dukes, Elizabeth Hawthorne, Clayton A. Railey, and Vera Zdravkovich May 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 5
Count all 1121
Community colleges play an essential role in preparing the U.S. workforce. Historically, they have responded to the needs of local economies, working closely with industry, government, and other education sectors (Boggs, 2010). Despite the successful track record of community colleges, the nation is faced with a significant challenge: By 2022, skilled technical job openings in the U.S. are projected to exceed the skilled technical labor force by 1.3 percentage points, or about 3.4 million (National Science Board, 2019).
Donna Whitehouse and Jill Channing April 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 4
Count all 161
According to Jacobs (2019), the term “shadow college” was first coined in the early 1990s at Macomb Community College, Michigan, in response to a variety of vocational courses that cropped up throughout that institution. Shadow college coursework is a departure from a more traditional approach to workforce education. Examples of shadow college coursework include specific career-based degrees in health care or welding, which are often noncredit, and the traditional noncredit learning opportunity offered under the guise of community-based education such as GED or art classes.
Brandon Bailey March 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 3
Count all 250
Last September, on the Friday before fall classes began, nearly 1,000 students at De Anza College logged in to a series of virtual sessions where they met and spoke with instructors, counselors, and fellow students in six new communities known as Villages. Throughout the morning, students were able to ask questions about their major or related subjects, and learn about programs and activities geared to their areas of interest.
Dawn Lindsay February 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 2
Count all 286
Much has been written about how community colleges are recovering from the impact of the global health pandemic and lessons learned to date. Upon reflection, I am proud of the accomplishments that Anne Arundel Community College (AACC) faculty and staff have realized since 2020 by coming together in creative and innovative ways that we could never have predicted. Along with looking back, it is vital that we look forward.
Larisa Pfeiffer January 2022
Volume: 35 Issue: 1
Count all 238
Leadership development is a top priority for higher education. As senior leaders leave the community college workforce, the once predicted potential crisis “threatening the future of community colleges in the form of a leadership void” (Shults, 2001, p. 2) is upon us. Organizations have long predicted significant presidential turnover.
Carlos R. Morales December 2021
Volume: 34 Issue: 12
Count all 199
Since early 2020, higher education has grappled to ensure academic continuity amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, a challenge many experts believe will inform the future use of instructional technologies (Morales, 2019, 2020a).
Andrew W. Bowne November 2021
Volume: 34 Issue: 11
Count all 196
Initially, community colleges were created to provide increased access to higher education for students who were too often excluded from college and university experiences. From the creation of junior and community colleges in the early 1900s through the latter years of the 20th century, community colleges primarily focused on increasing access to higher education for students of color, first-generation students, and students with limited financial means or academic preparation. Many federal programs, such as the GI Bill, TRiO, and Title III, provided infusions of support for this goal.
Kevin Bowersox-Johnson October 2021
Volume: 34 Issue: 10
Count all 223
In December 2019, Seattle Colleges’ colleagues Victor Kuo and Daihong Chen (2019) introduced the institution’s strategic plan scorecard to “measure what matters.” To ensure that goals are achievable, faculty and staff must have ownership in developing their own plan of action that aligns their department’s work to the larger institutional goals.
Mia Ocean, Matt Saboe, Simon Condliffe, Erin N. Spencer, and Keith Hazen September 2021
Volume: 34 Issue: 9
Count all 176
Community college leaders face increasing pressure to prove a return on government investment in their institutions. Performance-based funding measures and economic impact studies are commonly used to monetize the success of community colleges. These well-intentioned efforts produce a beneficial, but limited, view of community colleges. However, community college leaders are well versed in navigating the needs, and sometimes competing interests, of diverse stakeholders.
Katie Tagye, Natasha McIlmurray, and Lauren R. Thomas August 2021
Volume: 34 Issue: 8
Count all 217
The reach and impact of COVID-19 is not a new point of conversation. Throughout the world, families, businesses, and schools adjusted their practices and schedules in response to the global pandemic. Some of those shifts were unexpected, undesirable, and even devastating. At Valencia College, the institutional shift to remote work gave the Organizational Design and Development (ODD) team, led by Director Katie Tagye, an opportunity to revamp a long-standing program to more accurately address the needs of the college and its employees.

Pages