MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — MTSU continues to get national recognition for its leadership in
using data analytics to boost the university’s retention rates to record
levels.
Rick Sluder, vice provost for
student success and dean of University College, is among 25 education leaders
being profiled as an “EdTech Hero” by the website edscoop.com, an online
publisher focused on education trends that is part of a Washington, D.C.-based
publisher Scoop News Group.
Since
coming to MTSU in 2014, Sluder has emphasized the use of “predictive analytics”
in student advising to identify at-risk students and formulate strategies to
keep them in school and on track to graduate.
The
EdScoop web article notes a three-year grant MTSU was awarded in 2015 to obtain
analytics software to improve retention. The article points out that “four
years ago, MTSU’s first-year retention rate was at 68 percent. In fall 2016, it
was up to 76 percent — the highest rate of retention in the institution’s
history.”
MTSU’s
student success work has been reported in the Chronicle of Higher Education,
The Washington Post, The New York Times and more than a dozen other national
publications.
Sluder
notes this type of recognition is a reflection of the excellent work being
completed by faculty and staff on the MTSU campus.
“We have
an excellent cadre of professional advisors who are committed to assisting
students and have truly made a difference in their lives.” Sluder said.
“Faculty here care about student learning.”
Earlier
this year, the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities announced
that MTSU was part of a national online course to guide other institutions
toward more efficient advising. APLU is offering the six-lesson, self-paced
course titled “A SMART Approach to Student Success: Strategic Management of
Advising Reform and Technology” on its website, www.aplu.org.
In 2015,
the Education Advisory Board, a higher education consulting firm,
honored MTSU with its Data-Driven Impact Award for quantifiable improvements in
student retention.
The
ongoing emphasis on student retention is part of the campuswide Quest for
Student Success reforms launched by university President Sidney A. McPhee
in fall 2013 to improve student retention and graduation rates.
“MTSU
has exceptional leadership, from the president and provost, to chairs and
advisor managers — something that doesn’t happen by accident on a college
campus” Sluder said.
No comments:
Post a Comment